Olympus SP-350

By Theano Nikitas, CNET.com on 14/12/2005

More Olympus reviews , RRP: AU$699.00

The good:

  • Manual controls with sophisticated options
  • Raw capture and onboard editing
  • Compact, attractive body
  • Accepts external flash
  • Conversion lenses and underwater housing available

The bad:

  • Sluggish performance
  • No xD-Picture Card included
  • Soft photos

The bottomline:

This Olympus SP-350 is packed with powerful manual features, but its performance and photo quality lag behind the competition's.

Users' rating:

9/10

The smart-looking, matte-black, 8-megapixel Olympus SP-350 is one of three cameras that launched Olympus's SP line; the other two are its 7-megapixel twin, the SP-310, and the 6-megapixel, 10X-zoom SP-500 UZ. The Barbie-size SP-350 is not only one of the most affordable 8-megapixel cameras on the market, but also one of the smallest. Its 24 scene modes will appeal to snapshooters, while enthusiasts will appreciate this pocketful's manual controls, raw-capture and custom settings, and optional conversion lenses, external flash and underwater housing. Once you get past those attractions, however, you're left with relatively mediocre performance and photos.

Despite its diminutive size, the moderately lightweight 238 gram (when equipped with one CR-V3 or two AA batteries and an xD-Picture Card) Olympus SP-350 handles surprisingly well. Photographers with sizable mitts may feel cramped by its tiny buttons, but its controls are arranged within easy reach around the 2.5-inch LCD. Other than flash, exposure compensation, aperture and shutter speeds--which you can control directly with the navigation buttons -- all other functions are menu-driven; you even have to scroll through the tabbed menu to turn on the macro setting, which slowed shooting on a couple of occasions.

But the menus are filled with sophisticated features, such as metering and focusing options, raw capture (with basic onboard raw editing and conversion), user-controllable noise reduction and flash intensity, and white-balance compensation for fine-tuning colour bias. You can set and save four groups of parameters and access them via the mode dial. Sharpness, contrast and saturation are adjustable an amazing five full steps up or down. The Olympus SP-350's multiple burst modes include bracketing for focus as well as exposure. A time-lapse feature captures images over an extended period, and in Manual mode, the Bulb feature allows long exposures. The camera also has a high-resolution movie mode.

The 38mm-to-114mm (35mm equivalent) lens zooms smoothly through its focal range, although the autofocus lags a nanosecond behind. Equipped with an AF illuminator, the Olympus SP-350 can accurately focus under low light; it may take a hair longer than you'd like, but the camera does lock. Although the LCD gains up in low light, it has relatively low resolution and tends to wash out in bright sunlight, leaving you to take your chances with the tiny -- but bright -- optical viewfinder.

The Olympus SP-350 doesn't come close to breaking any speed records in burst mode, although at a little better than 1fps, it beats the camera's sluggish single shot-to-shot times, which can reach almost 5 seconds with flash. If you're shooting in raw format, you'll have to wait about 12 seconds before you can shoot again.

  
Shots look good overall, but the camera tends to clip highlights and poorly resolve detail, which can result in some painterly-looking artifacts.

Image quality is good but not great. The camera produces vivid colours, and the dynamic range favours slight underexposure, which sometimes results in clipped highlights; however, exposures are generally accurate. But images lack detail and although noise remains relatively low throughout the ISO range -- even without noise reduction turned on -- details become even softer as light sensitivity increases. We noticed some purple fringing, but it wasn't particularly offensive.

If you're looking for a full-featured, moderately priced high-resolution camera, the Olympus SP-350 certainly qualifies. But if you're concerned about performance or photo quality, it's probably worth spending a little extra on a competitor.

Shooting speed
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Typical shot-to-shot time  
Time to first shot  
Shutter lag (typical)  
Sony Cyber Shot DSC-N1
1.6 
1.8 
0.3 
Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX1
1.4 
3.8 
0.6 
Olympus Stylus 800
1.7 
2.0 
0.6 
Olympus SP-350
2.7 
1.6 
0.7 
Nikon Coolpix P1
4.0 
5.2 
0.7 
Canon PowerShot SD550
2.0 
1.6 
0.7 
Note: Seconds.

Typical continuous-shooting speed
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Canon PowerShot SD550
1.8 
Olympus Stylus 800
1.3 
Olympus SP-350
0.9 
Note: Frames per second.

NOTE: Cameras in this test are for comparative purposes only and are not necessarily available in the Australian market.

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Ján Fortiak
20/07/2008, 01:54 AM

rating
9
/10

New Firmware 1.4 bateries ok.

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