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Pentax Optio W30 Review
Review Date: June 11th 2007
Author: Mark Goldstein
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Introduction
The Pentax Optio W30 is a new waterproof camera that can be used at a depth of
up to three metres for 2 hours. The W30 is also weather-sealed
and immune to dust and sand, making it a great camera for
the
beach.
On the camera side, the Pentax W30 has a 7.1 megapixel sensor,
3x optical zoom lens (38-114mm) and a digital Shake Reduction
mode for both still pictures and video. Other standout features
include a 2.5 inch LCD monitor, 1cm macro mode, ISO 64-3200
and Face Recognition. I subjected the Pentax W30 to
the ultimate test - a trip on a lifeboat, courtesy of the
Royal National Lifeboat Institute (RNLI) at their training
college in Poole, UK. They certainly showed
me what their job is all about, speeding along at up to 25
knots in a £2.5 million Tamar-class lifeboat, getting battered
by waves and sea-spray. Carry on reading to find out if the Pentax Optio W30
survived the sea voyage.
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Ease of Use
The Pentax Optio W30 is a fairly compact, slim digital camera that just about
fits in the palm of your hand, measuring 107.5(W) x 54 (H)
x
23.5mm
(D) and weighing around 140g. This is a camera that you
won't notice carrying in a trouser/shirt pocket or
a handbag. It has an under-stated appearance that is fairly
attractive, but which isn't going to really wow anyone either,
with grey seals around all of the important slots and compartments.
A sticker on front of my review sample proudly proclaims
that
the Pentax
Optio
W30
is Class 8 waterproof, Class 5 dustproof and allows underwater
photography. As mentioned in the introduction, the W30 survived
a gruelling afternoon on a lifeboat in the English Channel.
Despite getting soaked in rain and seawater, the camera was
fully functional at all times. The Royal National Lifeboat Institute exclusively use the Pentax
Optio W30 to record their daily activities, both in and out of the water, which is a great testament
to the camera's ruggedness. It should easily survive your
next
beach
holiday!
The 3x optical zoom lens is a non-extending model that has a protective
clear cover in front of it, helping to keep things water
and dust proof. It means that the lens is always visible,
which is a little disconcerting at first. Apart from the
lens and grey seals, this a very conventional camera
in all other respects. The Pentax Optio W30 is a point and
shoot camera with no advanced
exposure controls,
so it's not particularly complex in terms of its design.
There are 11 external controls in total. The large 2.5 inch
LCD screen dominates the rear of the camera, with most of
the controls situated
to the right of the LCD, including a thumb-operated zoom
lever. The On/Off and shutter buttons are located on the
top, battery and SD card slots on the left, and AV / DC In
ports on the bottom. Pentax have even managed to locate the
plastic tripod mount in the middle of the bottom of the camera.
The main menu system on the Pentax Optio W30 is straight-forward to use and is
accessed by pressing the Menu button below the navigation
pad. There are two main menus, Rec Mode and Setting. The
majority of the camera's main options, such as image size,
sharpness, metering mode and ISO Speed, are accessed here,
so the Rec Mode menu has 15 options spread over 3 screens.
Due to the large LCD screen and restricting the number of
on-screen choices to 5, the various options and icons are
very clear and legible.
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| Lens Cover Open |
Rear Controls |
If you have never used a digital camera before, or you're upgrading from a more
basic model, reading the comprehensive and easy-to-follow
manual before you start is a must. Unfortunately Pentax have
chosen to only supply it as a PDF on a CD, and not as a printed
manual. The large 2.5 inch LCD screen is the only way of
framing your shots, so if you have to have an optical viewfinder,
look elsewhere now. The various icons used to represent the
camera settings are clear and legible, and the camera managed
over 200 shots before the battery needed to be recharged,
which isn't too bad.
The Pentax Optio W30 has a digital
anti-shake system called Digital SR, which works in both
still and movie
shooting modes. Choose this scene mode and the Pentax Optio
W30 automatically compensates for camera shake, which
is a slight blurring of the image that typically occurs at
slow shutter speeds. Unfortunately this isn't a mechanical-based
system. Instead the camera just increases the ISO speed up
to the maximum of ISO 3200, which allows for slower shutter
speeds but also increases the noise levels. More experienced
photographers will also already know how and when to manually
change the ISO speed to help combat camera shake. The Digital
SR is a good choice for beginners when shooting in low-light
conditions, but be prepared for noisier images.
The new Face Recognition feature offered by the Pentax Optio W30 didn't make
a great deal of difference if I'm being honest, as there's
the tendency of the user to pre-focus on the subject – and
obviously a face if taking a portrait – before fully pressing
the shutter button anyway. Pentax have also only applied
it to three specific scene modes (Portrait, Self-Portrait
and Natural Skin Tone),
rather
than a general setting that applies to
whichever shooting
mode
is
currently
selected,
which rather limits its usefulness. Face recognition does
work if the subjects are looking directly at the camera,
but the W30 takes a while to lock onto the subject, and I
think that the tried and trusted method of half-pressing
the shutter button to focus and then recomposing the shot
is a quicker and more reliable method.
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| Memory
Card Slot |
Battery
Compartment |
The start-up time from turning the Pentax
Optio W30 on to being ready to take a photo is quite quick
at around 2 seconds, and it takes 1.5 seconds
to zoom from the widest focal length to the longest. Focusing
is very quick in good light and the camera happily achieves
focus most of the time indoors
or in low-light situations, despite the lack of an AF assist
lamp. The visibility and refresh rate of the 2.5 inch LCD
screen are good, although the
low number of pixels (115,000) does make the image a little
grainy. It takes about 0.5 second to store a JPEG image,
allowing you
to keep
shooting
as they
are being
recorded onto the memory card - there is no LCD blackout
between each image. Note that there is a few seconds delay
if you try and playback an image straight after taking it.
In Continuous mode the camera takes 1 frame
per 1.2
seconds
for
up to 4 images
at
the
highest
JPEG image quality, which isn't particularly fast. There
is a high-speed mode which gives 2.5fps, but the image resolution
is reduced to 3 megapixels. Overall the Pentax Optio W30
is fairly quick in terms of operational
speed.
Once you have captured a photo, the
Pentax Optio W30 has an excellent range of options when it
comes to playing, reviewing and managing your images. You
can instantly
scroll through the images that you have taken, view thumbnails,
and zoom in and out up to 8x magnification. You can view
slideshows with audio and effects, set the print order,
delete, protect,
crop, rotate and resize an image. There are a range of different
effects, including red-eye reduction, digital filters, frames
and in-camera movie editing. There's also a new Image Recovery
option which will rescue deleted
images,
just
so
long as
you don't
turn
the
camera off first. The OK button toggles detailed
settings information about each picture on and off, such
as the ISO
rating and aperture / shutter speed, and there is a small
histogram available during both shooting and playback. When
taking a photo, pressing the OK button toggles between
the detailed information, the histogram and no information.
In summary the Pentax Optio W30 is
an easy-to-use, unassuming point and shoot
camera with the obvious attraction of the water and dust
proofing.
PhotographyBLOG
is a member of the DIWA
organisation. Our test results for the Pentax Optio W30 have been submitted to DIWA
for comparison with test results for different samples of
the same camera model supplied by other DIWA
member sites.
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