Schwach | Durchschnitt | Gut | Exzellent | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bildschirmgröße | 2,5 in Am besten: Sony Cyber-shot DSC-W710 Bildschirmgröße: 6,7 in | |||
ISO maximal | 1600 Am besten: Pentax KP ISO maximal: 819200 | |||
Effektive Bildpunkte | 8,13 Mpx Am besten: Hasselblad H6D-100c Effektive Bildpunkte: 100 Mpx | |||
Maximale Auflösung | 3264 x 2448 px Am besten: Leica M11 Maximale Auflösung: 9528 x 6328 px |
Sensorgröße | 7.11 mm |
---|---|
Effektive Bildpunkte | 8.13 Mpx |
Maximale Auflösung | 3264 x 2448 px |
Digitaler Zoom | 4.0 x |
---|---|
Maximale Blende | 2.4 |
Brennweite äquiv | < 28 |
Bildstabilisator | Nein |
Gewinde filtern | Nein |
Gefaltete Optik | Nein |
Eingebautes Blitzlicht | Ja |
---|---|
3D-Unterstützung | Nein |
Manuelle Einstellungen | Ja |
Körpertyp | Kompakt |
---|---|
Farbe des Produkts | Schwarz |
Umweltversiegelt | Nein |
Speichertypen |
|
---|
HDMI | Nein |
---|---|
USB-Version | 2.0 |
PictBridge | Ja |
NFC | Nein |
Drahtloses Netzwerk (Wi-Fi) | Nein |
Bluetooth | Nein |
AV-Ausgang | Ja |
ISO |
|
---|---|
ISO-Minimum | 64 |
ISO maximal | 1600 |
Unterstützte Bilddateiformate |
|
Bildschirmgröße | 2.5 in |
---|---|
Gelenk-LCD | Nein |
Bildschirmpunkte | 1230000 |
Berührungssensitiver Bildschirm | Nein |
Sucher | Bildschirm |
Maximale Auflösung | 320 x 240 px |
---|---|
Videoaufnahme | Ja |
Unterstützte Videodateiformate | MJPEG |
Maximale Bildrate (höchste Auflösung) | 30.0 fps |
Gewicht | 200.0 g |
---|---|
Breite | 107.0 mm |
Höhe | 58.0 mm |
Tiefe | 25.0 mm |
Batterietechnologie | Lithium-Ionen |
---|---|
Wiederaufladbare Batterie | Ja |
Geographisches Positionierungs System | Nein |
---|---|
Zurückgezogene Optik (auch im Einschaltmodus) | Nein |
The GR Digital IV is the 2011 version of Ricoh's compact camera for serious photographers. With a fixed focal length 28mm wide-angle lens, high-sensitivity 10 megapixel sensor, excellent 3 inch LCD screen and faster auto-focus system, can the Ricoh GR Digital IV justify its equally serious price-tag of £499 / $599? Read our Ricoh GR Digital IV review to find out...
Announced almost a year ago - and rumored for a long time before - the GR Digital was always going to be something of a niche product. Described as a 'professional grade high resolution compact' the GR Digital echoes the design and ethos of the popular and very highly regarded GR series of film compacts and is unusual in having a fixed 28mm equivalent F2.4 lens and full photographic control. The 8MP GR-D (as we'll call it from now on) is also fairly expandable; with an optional optical viewfinder, 21mm equivalent ultra wide converter and dedicated flash available (though by then you've spend well over $1000). Originally released only in Europe and Asia, the GR-D has recently made its way to North America, though you're still unlikely to find it on the shelves of your local camera store. So does the GR-D live up to all the hype or is it just another 8MP compact with pretensions?
Following on from Hamish's thoughts shooting his recently discovered Ricoh GR Digital, I asked him if I could share my story of shooting one from new in 2007. When I got this little camera new, in a so-called "Creative Set" with the wide angle adapter and add on viewfinder, it felt like a compromise from the start - I didn't really want yet another compact camera with a wide-angle lens, I was much more interested in an entry level DSLR such as the Nikon D50 with a nifty-fifty.
From Japan With A Wide Angle
Ricoh GR Digital II review, find out how the GR Digital II stacks up against the competition in our real-world review with in-depth image quality comparisons.
Cyber-shot DSC-W15
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