Review: Ricoh Caplio R6 digital camera
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Review: Ricoh Caplio R6 digital camera

Portrait recognition and a huge zoom bring a new face to the Caplio range

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Recommended by PCW
Price: £229.99
Manufacturer: Ricoh
Technical specifications



Ratings
Overall rating: Overall rating
Features: Features
Ease of use: Ease of use
Value for money: Value for money
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Verdict

Pros: Solid build; good zoom range; rapid operation; face recognition; big LCD; live histogram
Cons: Small buttons; aggressive zoom mechanism; no storage card bundled
Overall: A respectable point-and-shoot digicam with wide lens, novel shooting features and clean output, although you’ll need slender fingers for comfortable operation


Karl Foster, Personal Computer World 16 Apr 2007

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It was only last September that Ricoh announced the 7.1x optical zoom, vibration reduction-equipped R5 compact.

But already it has been usurped by the R6, which not only has trendy face-recognition technology, but is claimed to be “the world’s thinnest camera (with wide-angle 7.1x optical zoom and at its thinnest point)”.

Riders aside, the R6 appears a svelte and sprightly beast, the zoom barrelling out of a reassuringly solid housing in less than a second.

The 2.7in LCD at rear is ghosting-free, although it suffers under bright sunlight, but there’s no complaint about rapidity of autofocus. There is a slight pause when an image is captured, but the camera’s ready for the next frame in less than a second.

As is common to compact digicams, there's a host of scene modes, one of the more intriguing being Skew Correction. Take a shot of a scene with converging verticals or horizontals, and the camera will straighten them up without recourse to Photoshop’s perspective transform.

Because of the LCD’s sheer size, the R6’s on-body controls are miniscule and the flash is situated right below the over-feisty zoom lever surrounding the shutter button. That said, layout is logical, even if the selector switch between standard, scene and custom-configurable My Modes is tricky to use accurately.

Image quality is commendable, with a moderate amount of digital noise appearing at higher ISO values.

However, the small but powerful zoom induces little distortion, such aberrations as purple fringing along high-contrast edges are mercifully absent - perhaps a nod to the in-camera processing. Face recognition is a welcome and effective bonus.

The Ricoh R6 is one of the more capable compacts currently available, and its lens range makes it more flexible than most, but those with large fingers will struggle with the controls.

See also:

Review: Fujifilm Finepix Z5fd digital cameraA stylish compact that looks as good as the pictures it produces  12 Mar 2007
image: ricoh caplio rr730A low-cost compact camera that’s simple enough for the first-time user  05 Mar 2007
image: nikon coolpix s9A stylish and compact digicam with some interesting features  10 Jan 2007

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