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Fujifilm Finepix F30 Review
Review Date: August 7th 2006
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Ease of Use
The Fujifilm Finepix F30 is a compact digital camera that
fits into both the palm of your hand and a trouser pocket.
With dimensions of 92.7 (W) x 27.8 (D) x 56.7 (H) mm and weighing
only 155g, this is a camera that you can slip into a pocket
or small bag and not notice until you need to use it. During
the course of this review, I carried the Fujifilm Finepix
F30 with me virtually all of the time, resulting in photos
that I otherwise may not have taken at all. Fujifilm have
made some subtle improvements to the F30, with the camera
being slightly smaller and having a less boxy design that
its predecessor, the Finepix F11. The large Mode dial on top
of the F11 has been replaced with a much smaller one on the
F30, the hand strap eyelet does not stick out from the camera
body, and there are some useful rubber dimples underneath
the zoom button to aid grip. One thing that has been changed
that is less useful is the removal of the large protruding
handgrip on the front of the camera - the F30 now has a much
smaller version which I found a little pointless. The Fujifilm
Finepix F30 is a little more pleasing on the eye than the
F11, with a stylish two-tone silver/champagne colour scheme
and a generally more rounded, compact appearance. It also
retains the excellent overall finish of the Fujifilm Finepix
F11. Despite being made entirely of plastic, it has a reassuring
heft and it looks and feels more expensive than it actually
is.
The Fujifilm Finepix F30 is fairly comfortable to hold, largely
thanks to the dimpled area underneath the zoom switch where
your right thumb is naturally positioned. Your right forefinger
is then free to operate the shutter button, whilst your thumb
controls the zoom. You can also comfortably hold the camera
and take pictures with one hand. Despite the smooth all-plastic
body, the camera is not too slippy when gripping it. The various
buttons are well-made and easy to operate, and the camera
feels well-balanced in your hands. Fujifilm have added a dedicated
button Exposure button (more on this later), moved the tripod
socket to a less favourable position, and thankfully included
a DC In port which allows you to recharge the F30 without
the use of a terminal adapter (which the F11 used). There
are no real innovative features here, but everything that
the Fujifilm Finepix F30 does, it does well. Overall the Fujifilm
Finepix F30 is well constructed and designed with no obvious
signs of corners being cut.
The Fujifilm Finepix F30 has relatively few external controls,
just 10 in total, which is surprising considering that this
camera offers a full range of photographic controls. You can
directly access the various flash, macro, self-timer and delete
options by clicking on the four buttons around the navigation
pad. As with most other Fujfilm digital cameras, the Fujifilm
FinePix F30 has a Menu button on the rear of the camera which,
as you would expect, gives you access to the software menu
system. This lets you set various parameters including shooting
mode (aperture-priority, shutter-priority or manual), white
balance, continuous mode and so on. There is also a small
silver button with an F on it, which opens what Fujifilm call
the Photo Mode menu. This allows you to control the file quality
setting, ISO speed and colour settings (B&W, Chrome or
Standard). I'm not really sure why these 3 settings alone
should fall under the heading of Photo Mode, and things like
white balance are just part of the standard menu. And I'm
undecided about whether it is a good idea or not. The F button
does give quick access to certain features, but you do have
to memorise what another button does. I also wish that Fujifilm
had included external buttons for the shooting mode and exposure
compensation options, as having to change what are frequently
used options through the menu system slows down the overall
operation of the camera.
| The Major Controls |
Power Button/ Mode
Dial / Shutter Button |
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As mentioned above, the F30 gains an Exposure button, which
allows you to access either shutter-speed priority or aperture-priority
(depending on which mode you have selected in the main menu)
and exposure compensation. Simply press the Exposure button
and then press left/right on the navigation pad to alter the
shutter speed or aperture, and up and down to set the exposure
compensation level. This is a great improvement on the F11,
where you had to set the exposure compensation via the main
menu. There is, however, an annoying by-product of this system.
Pressing the Exposure button effectively changes the default
behaviour of the navigation pad buttons, and you have to press
the same button again to change them back. I found that I
would often forget which mode the camera was operating in
and press, for example, the left button to change the aperture,
only to set the Macro mode by mistake, and vice versa. I would
have preferred a system where pressing the Exposure button
would allow you to change the exposure settings, but then
the navigation buttons would revert back to their default
settings after a certain period of time, so that you knew
that you then had to press the Exposure button again in order
to change the exposure.
There is a dial that on top of the camera that you turn to
select the various shooting modes (Movie, A/S, M, Auto and
Natural Light/Scene modes and Anti-blur). Its quite similar
to the system used on many DSLRs and allows quick access to
the various camera modes. All 10 external controls are clearly
labeled using industry-standard symbols and terminology. Overall
the camera body feels very well-designed and not at all cluttered,
despite the presence of the large 2.5 inch LCD screen. Note
that there is no optical viewfinder on the Finepix F30, leading
to a few moments of frustration in very bright sunlight when
it can be difficult to see the image on the monitor clearly.
The F30's LCD monitor has a matt finish, compared to the glossy
one on the F11, and it is also slightly recessed, which should
lead to fewer scratches. The increased resolution of 235,000
pixels is also very welcome.
If you have never used a digital camera before, or you're
upgrading from a more basic model, reading the comprehensive
and fairly easy-to-follow 160-page manual before you start
is a good idea. Thankfully Fujifilm have bucked the recent
trend of not providing hard-copy manuals and decided to supply
it in printed format. The main menu system on the Fujifilm
Finepix F30 is straight-forward to use and is accessed by
pressing the Menu/OK button in the middle of the navigation
pad. There is a single Shooting menu with 6 options. At the
bottom is the Setup option - select this to access 3 more
tabbed pages (each with 6 options) which contain options that
you will probably set once and then forget about. Due to the
large LCD screen, the various options and icons are perfectly
easy to read.
The F30 has a couple of new features up its sleeve. The Anti-blur
mode forces the camera to select a fast shutter speed in order
to freeze subject movement more effectively, whilst alo setting
a fast ISO speed and firing the flash (the Natural Light scene
mode doesn't fire the flash). It's an effective automatic
way of taking photos of children indoors, for example. Intelligent
Flash is a little more exciting. This feature is actually
a new scene mode called Natural Light and Flash (obviously
the marketing department didn't talk to the engineers about
the naming convention). When selected, the camera instantly
takes 2 photos, one with flash, one without, giving you the
option of which one to choose later (both are saved by the
camera).
| Battery Compartment |
Memory Card Slot |
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The Fujifilm Finepix F30 offers a range of advanced exposure
modes, including shutter-priority, aperture-priority and manual,
perfect for the photographer who wants to take full control.
The manual mode is actually misleading, however, in that it
does not allow you to set both the aperture and shutter speed
at the same time. Instead, the camera actually sets the aperture/shutter
speed, whilst you can change all of the other settings (white
balance, exposure compensation and so on). If you buy the
Fujifilm Finepix F30 because you think it has a proper manual
exposure mode, then you will be sorely disappointed.
There are some other notable missing features that will disappoint
the photographer in you, and which I think Fujifilm should
really have added to the Finepix F30. Firstly there is no
manual focus mode, which is fine for most of the time as the
camera's auto-focus usually locks onto your intended target,
but is an annoying omission on the occasions when it struggles
(usually in low-light). An infinity mode for landscapes would
have been a good idea, but this is also missing. Somewhat
amazingly, Fujifilm have not included a histogram, either
in shooting mode or image playback. Most if not all of their
recent advanced cameras have this important feature, so it's
pretty unforgivable not to include it on a camera that is
aimed at the serious photographer. Finally there is no RAW
mode, which may or may not be a deal-breaker for you.
The start-up time from turning the Fujifilm Finepix F30 on
to being ready to take a photo is very quick at around 0.75
second, and it takes about 1.5 seconds to zoom from the widest
focal length to the longest, and back again. Focusing is very
quick in good light and the camera achieves focus most of
the time indoors or in low-light situations, helped by a powerful
focus-assist lamp. The visibility and refresh rate of the
2.5 inch LCD screen are good, and the resolution is excellent.
It takes about 2 seconds to store an image, allowing you to
keep shooting as they are being recorded onto the memory card
- there is no LCD blackout between each image. In Continuous
mode the camera takes 2.2 frames per second at the highest
image quality, which is fairly quick for this class of camera,
although this is limited to only 3 frames. There is a mode
that allows you to take 40 frames at 1.5 sec. intervals, but
only at the 6M Normal picture quality level. All in all the
Fujifilm Finepix F30 is quite fast in terms of operational
speed.
Once you have captured a photo, the Fujifilm Finepix F30
has a good range of options when it comes to playing, reviewing
and managing your images. You can scroll through the images
that you have taken, view thumbnails, zoom in and out, sort
images by date, view slideshows with lots of different settings,
delete, protect, trim and rotate an image. You can also add
a sound clip to an image, set the print order and the transfer
order. The Display button toggles detailed settings information
about each picture on and off, such as the ISO rating and
aperture/shutter speed. As noted above, there is no histogram.
In summary the Fujifilm Finepix F30 is a compact, well built
and easy to use digital camera that offers a lot of creative
control, but which also (still) has some annoying omissions
in its feature set.
PhotographyBLOG
is a member of the DIWA
organisation. Our test results for the Fujifilm Finepix F30
have been submitted to DIWA
for comparison with test results for different samples of
the same camera model supplied by other DIWA
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