I actually bought this
camera accidentally - I saw it and I thought it was the Fuji Silvi which
is more sought after camera and have the same user interface. I bought
it for £1 and
when I returned home I realised my mistake. Ohh.. what the heck, it is
just a pound so it stayed in the cupboard for some time, thinking most
of the time to sell it. Eventually I forgot all about it and a month
ago, as I was tidying up the closet I found it
again. I thought to run a film through it and see how it performs.
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| Fuji's User interface. Big and easy to follow |
The little Fuji comes
from the distant 2002 and it was marketed as an upper class hi-end
compact. It had a street price of £200 when new and Popular Photography
reviewed it along with
cameras such as the Minolta TC-1, the Contax T3 etc and gave it a 3.5
out of five. No bad at all actually. According to the magazine the lens
performed very well to excellent with very low flare due to Fuji's EBC
coating. The pictures I got from this camera
came out quite good actually, good contrast and very little -if nay -
flare but not up to the same league as the fixed lens compacts I have
reviewed in my blog. Better to use this compact between the 28mm and
somewhere in the middle (around 50mm) - beyond
that you can notice a drop in the quality. The lens is slow also, f5.6
at 28mm and reaching (I think) f/11 at 100mm - so it is not for low
light photography.
Fuji Zoom date 1000 vs. Olympus Super zoom 140s vs. Rollei Giro 70wa
But how does the Fuji compare with the other two -similarly feature packed - compact offerings from Olympus and Rollei? Actually, there is little to choose between them. All three cameras produce pretty much the same results so it is down to personal preference. The Fuji is smaller that the other two and has a nice aluminium body while the other two feel quite plastically. The Olympus focuses the fastest of the three and has a spot meter but it is at the same time the biggest of them all. My Rollei sample has been a bit temperamental, at times refusing to focus but I do have nice pictures from it and the lens has the best looking coating I've ever seen ! Out of the three, the Olympus is the quietest and the loudest is the Rollei which sounds like a blender each time it advances the film.
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| Beautifully Coated lens ! |
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| Fuji vs. Olympus size |
Conclusion
The Fuji Zoom date 1000
is a nice camera that can be found quite cheap on car boot sales. It
produces nice results and it has an attractive aluminium finish. Don't
pay more for a tenner
to get it. There are other cameras flooding car boot sales that produce
pretty similar results and cost less. If you decide to go ahead with
buying it, stick to the wider end of the zoom range and you will be
pleasantly surprised.




Does it have exposure compensation?
ReplyDeleteIt's been so long ago that i don't remember.
Delete