Design
With the Caplio R5, Ricoh offers a choice of a red, silver or black casing colour. Measuring 96mm wide by 55mm high by 26mm deep and weighing 140 grams (without battery or SD card), the camera is about the same size as many compact cameras on the market, so handling isn't a problem.
Anyone familiar with the Caplio brand will not notice much change in the design of this model as it keeps all of the functions on the back of the device except for the power and shutter buttons. Lined vertically next to the LCD is a little zoom lever at top, then underneath the playback, adjust, delete and display buttons. The mode selector is located at the top right, with a switch to position it to either image, scene (pre-defined/customised settings) or movie mode. Below the mode selector is the trusty old menu wheel, which you press for flash, macro, image review and other settings.
Both the rechargeable battery and memory card are located inside the slide-away cover underneath the camera and are easy to eject.
Features
The R5's seven megapixels can produce a top picture resolution of 3072 x 2304 pixels. If it's close-ups you want though, there's plenty of zoom capability. Wide angle optical zoom of 7.1x should please those with an eagle eye, and digital zoom of 3.6x can take you closer. The auto resize zoom feature, which we'll get to shortly, can close in even further.
As camera manufacturers have been telling us for a while though, it's not all about megapixels and zoom. If you need to be able to capture an image at the drop of a hat, the R5's shutter response time of 0.09 seconds should serve you well. If you need to take plenty of rapid-fire, back-to-back shots, its continuous shooting mode of 2.8 frames per second should also do the job.
The most notable, and one of the few truly new features of the R5, is its digital zoom function called auto resize zoom. This allows digital zoom of up to 4.8x, and automatically resizes (or crops) your shot in the camera's memory to produce a better quality image. Of course, the tradeoff is image size. For example, if you've zoomed to the maximum 4.8x, the resulting photo will be of 640 x 480 (VGA) in size. So if you don't need a massive image of your close-up, this could give you the high level of detail you're looking for. The other auto resize zoom magnifications are 1.2x (reduced image size of 2592 x 1944), 1.5x (2048 x 1536) and 2.4x (1280 x 960). This feature is not tricky to operate and works just like standard digital zoom, although it can only be used when the intitial image size of shots is set to 3072 x 2304.
To see the finer image quality produced by the auto resize zoom, we shot the same subject twice.
The first shot was taken with digital zoom of 3.6x, without the auto resize zoom function, while our second snap used the auto resize zoom and its increased zoom of 4.8x. The first shot without the auto resize zoom appears a little more blurry than the second shot using auto resize zoom.
When it comes to shooting video, the R5 can record at a higher resolution than that of its predecessor, the Caplio R4. The R5 offers video recording of 640 x 480 (VGA) at 30fps, which Ricoh quite fairly claims is good enough for publishing on the web. This might be an incentive to upgrade for YouTube addicts.
The other marked improvement the R5 has on the R4 is a higher resolution 2.5 inch LCD screen. The new model has a screen of 230,000 pixels, well up from the 153,000 pixels of the R4. However, we can't say we found the screen easier to view than other cameras. Ricoh claims the LCD offers better viewing in strong light conditions, but we still found ourselves often having to shield it or move elsewhere to see properly in sunlight.
Other more standard features of the camera include skew correction mode, which can straighten your image if it was slanted. There's also macro shooting at 1cm and close-up flash shooting at 14cm (telephoto) or 20cm (wide-angle).
Performance
To put it simply: not good enough. Our review model produced a number of lock-ups and malfunctions during the course of our review period, despite being tested in friendly conditions.
The simplest of these was the old-fashioned lockup. Every now and then while being operated, the device would seize up and freeze. Not even the lens would retract. We couldn't pin this problem down to a certain function causing the lock-up, it was just random. No matter which button we pressed, including the power button, the camera would not break from its frozen state. Of course, this could be quickly and easily fixed by sliding the battery out, then in again. The camera would then return to normal operating mode without the loss of photos or settings.
More alarming was the tendency of playback mode to occassionally not display our images. Several times we pressed the button to reflect on our recent snaps, only to be greeted by a grey screen with the words: "Unmatched file". We flicked back to earlier shots hoping the problem would disappear, but our panic only grew as the grey screen appeared for all of them. While we feared we'd lost our precious images, we later found them unscathed when playback mode operated successfully. One possibile cause of the problem is the camera had difficulty reading our memory card.
It's only fair to note that both of these problems could usually be fixed quickly. When it wasn't producing hiccups, the R5 worked fine. However, when there are so many digital cameras to choose on the market, you have to ask yourself whether you should put up with it. Let's hope every other R5 device in Ricoh's production line isn't as prone to stalling as our review model.
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PatchMe
21/06/2008, 05:17 PM
rating
5/10
Hi, bought one odf these at the recommendation of the sales person, right from the start all the images had noise on them. I now have take the auto ISO out and just use 200 ISO. some still have noise in the photo, but what else can you do with this camera.
Pros: long battery life
Cons: pictures all grainy - noise
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moses
19/06/2008, 04:06 PM
rating
3/10
Have had mine for just over a year! - Therefore warrantee just lapsed and I am on here doing research this time for a new camera! It just froze on me and died! I found not the easiest camera to use.
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rella*
28/11/2007, 07:00 AM
rating
8/10
i just bought mine... and im pretty much satisfied with e features...
Pros: e macro works wonders, 7.1x optical zoom
Cons: lags when u switch to playback mode immediately after a shot.
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gordon
31/03/2007, 08:38 AM
rating
6/10
My new R5 does not freeze up or lose track of images (yet...but I have shot 100 or so images without problem). Vertical blue stripes appear on the LCD when shooting in very difficult light environments, (I was macro-ing right in on an object in very patchy incandescent light), but they do not actually obliterate the image on the LCD, and they don't transfer to the saved image at all. My original R4 (itself very new) was fragile...it suffered a bad pixel bleed in the LCD after only moderately rough handling, and the camera died completely after being used once only in the rain.
Pros: The white balance presets for incand and fluoro light, and the manual WB give good results.
The macro is outstanding and is the only reason i bought this camera
Cons: blue stripes inconvenient.
I suspect it will be as fragile as the R5
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anonymous
04/02/2007, 07:31 PM
rating
4/10
When we bought this camera we were very impressed with its specificaltions - the fantastic optical zoom and shutter lag really is the best Ive seen for the price. However I am VERY concerned about the performance of the LCD screen. It tended to be quite dull and grainy, especially in low light, but most importantly when the camera was focusing, especially in areas where the flash was needed, lines of interference similar to that seen on a TV flashed across the screen. We exchanged this camera for another, and this camera did the same too. We are taking this camera back to exchange for a different model and have heard of others doing the same.
The interference doesn't transfer to the images but seriously compromises the ability to use the screen to effectively frame shots.
Pros: Shutter lag and optical zoom really do seem the best in the price range.
Cons: Quality of the LCD screen leaves a lot to be desired. Furthermore, Im not entirely convinced that the photoes are much better than my 4yr old digicam.
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