New Compact camera,,Suggestions wanted

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Canon S120 is a nice one.
Consider a true wideangle lens (24/25mm equiv). Tech specs often boast of the zoom range but ignore widest angle.
 

shouldbeinbed

Rollin' along
Location
Manchester way
Another Panasonic Lumix fan. The glass is good, it renders the colours accurately, viewed on screen or (horrors) printed out, the images are crisp and clear, the ergonomics & software are good too, buttons and switches in a sensible place, clear and easy to master menu's and shooting modes from fully auto point and shoot to whatever level of control you want.
 

slowmotion

Quite dreadful
Location
lost somewhere
I'm another Lumix fan. Mine's a £100 one and it takes decent snaps on Auto which is all I ever use. It's really small and slim, and if I drop it on the tarmac, it won't be a catastrophic financial hit. I had a Canon Powershot SX100 before which I found to be far too big to conveniently carry on the bike.
 
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steveindenmark

steveindenmark

Legendary Member
I have actually got Panasonic Lumix DMC TZ10. I have had it a few years now and it has had a lot of use and has taken a lot of battering. It only has a x12 zoom and I would like more zoom.

I will have a look through your suggestions and see what catches my eye. But thanks for the suggestions.
 

shouldbeinbed

Rollin' along
Location
Manchester way
I have actually got Panasonic Lumix DMC TZ10. I have had it a few years now and it has had a lot of use and has taken a lot of battering. It only has a x12 zoom and I would like more zoom.

I will have a look through your suggestions and see what catches my eye. But thanks for the suggestions.
Stick with optical zoom as much as you can get if this is a key factor, the 'mechanical' resolution of light is far better than digital interpolation.
 

slowmotion

Quite dreadful
Location
lost somewhere
I used to work at Amateur Photographer back in the day. We thought a 70-210mm zoom was just the hound's cojones!
Crikey, you just reminded me of those long distance test shots of a navy ship moored on the Thames!
 
It only has a x12 zoom and I would like more zoom.
More zoom usually means more telephoto.
Modern cameras have an excess of pixels. A 16mp Panasonic produces images 4,608 x 3,456 pixels
If you printed out at 150dpi (for viewing on a wall), this image measures 30x23", bigger than A3.
You can zoom by selection with no loss in quality, or loose a little by interpolation.
At the wideangle side of zoom, if something is outside the angle of view, it is lost. With a wider angle, you can capture more, in tight spaces, large groups of people, large spaces.
I would always trade some telephoto power for wideangle, unless I specialized in wildlife photography.
 

mybike

Grumblin at Garmin on the Granny Gear
I carry a Vivitar I bought for 99p in a charity shop, but if you want something with a bit of quality I'd go with the Canon G series, a new one might be over your budget tho'. Mine's the G15 BTW, superb little camera.
 

MontyVeda

a short-tempered ill-controlled small-minded troll
I love my Lumix GX1. Luckily I got it at a reduced price...
The other thing that annoys me... after i bought my Lumix XR3i* .. my dad bought one, my dad's mate bought one, my mate bought one then his brother bought one... do i get a %age of the sales I'd generated from Panasonic? Did I feck!

*or whatever the actual model is
 
Yep - I have had the Powershot G15 since Christmas 2013. I'm going to be replacing it this Christmas (possibly depends of the house purchase tbh)
However @steveindenmark do you use RAW? One of the main reasons I have the powershot G series is that it shoots in RAW and that is what I want from a small compact camera. (For me the G15 is a small compact camera). If you don't want RAW, then it is overkill.

You've seen the pictures I take with it, if you haven't then look at today's ride for today... I have just uploaded some stunning ones taken yesterday. It is a smashing little camera and for me, worth every penny. It can also take a polarising filter and has a built in ND filter to handle really bright conditions. But the entire G series do have an issue with the shutter mechanism which if you are not aware of it and don't handle the camera correctly can scratch the lens. Its a design flaw IMO, but if you know about it, you can avoid it and I still buy the series even knowing about it. (I have had the G11 and still have the G12 and G15, I just never got around to selling the G12... :whistle:)
 
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