Fujifilm FinePix S8100fd

By Rich Trenholm on 29 July 2008

RRP   AU$549.00

Good: Enormous zoom, Angular styling, Wealth of features.

Bad: Battery life.


We're actually struggling to think of anything bad about the 10-megapixel zooming behemoth that is the Fujifilm FinePix S8100fd. It's a versatile and reliable camera that gets looks, features, image quality and controls right.

Sometimes things are just too far away to see. That's where superzooms like the 10-megapixel Fujifilm FinePix S8100fd come in. The enormous 18x zoom lens is perfect for getting up close to the action at sports events, concerts or when stalking unrequited loves.

The question that hangs over these dSLR-styled yet compact-proportioned snappers is how useful they are everyday and whether the cost of a large lens is compromised pictures.

Design
The S8100 avoids the lumpen blockiness of many superzooms. The grip feels enormous for solid one-handed shooting. The zoom is lightning fast to leap in and out. It's a little clunky for fine adjustments, but the collar rocker switch is chunky and grippable.

The lens extending will pop the lens cap off, which saves some hassle. But is it healthy for the lens?

An odd design quirk that we've seen a few times recently is that turning the camera on causes the extending lens to pop the lens cap off. While this saved us the bother, we wonder if it's healthy for the lens.

The pop-up flash is activated by a button at the side of the flash unit. It sits slightly above the lens to reduce red eye.

The S8100's 2.5-inch LCD screen can display up to 100 micro thumbnails in a grid. The viewfinder is always useful, although like most electronic viewfinders, this one is grainy, with diagonal lines not rendered very well.

Features
It has a focal length of 28-486mm (35mm-equivalent) which is pleasingly wide. Optical image stabilisation and face detection are included and it supports xD-Picture Card as well as SD and SDHC.

The S8100 mode wheel gives you manual, program, aperture and shutter priority modes. Adjusting the shutter speed involves clicking up and down on the click pad or side-to-side for aperture.

The 18x optical zoom was quite impressive as seen from the cropped image on the left. Click here to enlarge.

Another interesting feature on the mode wheel is instant zoom, which takes three images near-simultaneously at different zoom levels. This is a cool idea, but sadly it's only digital zoom, so each image has a lower resolution than the last. You could achieve the same effect by cropping the first picture in your editing software.

Features include natural light mode and natural light plus flash mode, which take two pictures together, one with flash and without. In practice, there is a delay between the two images being taken, so it doesn't work that well with moving subjects. The flash can be usefully set at one of five increments.

Other features include movement tracking and a super macro mode that allows you to get as close as 1cm to your subject. This keeps the camera locked onto its subject as it moves around the frame.

Performance
The S8100 takes just a whisker too long to start up, but once it's powered on, the autofocus is fast and reliable. Face detection was also quick and capable, tracking subjects around the frame and dealing well with profiles.

Full resolution burst mode fires a very short burst. Three shots are captured in one second, which is decently fast, but this means you have to get your timing spot-on to capture your photo. A continuous mode doesn't do much burst when it limps at 0.3 frame per second. It keeps going for at least four minutes, but you may miss that split-second shot. We'd have liked a compromise between these two.

We're ambivalent about AA batteries. While they're convenient to buy in emergencies, that doesn't mean we want to spend all our time buying them. A lack of on-screen battery indicator in normal shooting mode was frustrating and we burned through the supplied batteries in just a few days' light use.

This crop at maximum ISO 1,600 shows how noise makes the image gritty, but not off-colour, while the noise reduction system smears some detail. Click here to enlarge.

Image Quality
Images were crisp with no trace at all of barrel distortion. We had to work hard to manufacture purple fringing by taking high-contrast images, but it wasn't noticeable and didn't ruin our shots.

Noise also handled well. Although images took on a visibly gritty texture from around ISO 400, the noise reduction system seemed to keep the red and blue speckles in line — and without sacrificing too much fine detail.

Conclusion
With crisp images, lots of features and accessible controls, the Fujifilm FinePix S8100fd ticks all the boxes. If you want the long zoom but would like something that would easily fit in the pocket, you'd have to go a long way to beat the Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ15, while the Olympus SP-560UZ is another 18x superzoom with a plethora of features. But we think the S8100fd is more stylish than most superzooms and, in fact,
has very little to count against it.

URL: http://www.cnet.com.au/fujifilm-finepix-s8100fd-339290902.htm