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Review: Sanyo Xacti DMX-CA8 digital camera

An eight-megapixel camera that’s waterproof to 1.5m

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Price: £249.99
Manufacturer: Sanyo 01923 246 363
Specifications: Eight-megapixel Cmos sensor • 5x optical zoom • 640x480 (VGA) 60 fps 6mbit/sec AVC/H.264 video • SD HC card support • 2.5in LCD • 44MB inbuilt display • 48KHz stereo audio • USB2 • Composite video • Adobe Premiere Elements 4.0 • Adobe Photoshop Album Starter Edition
Ratings
Overall rating: Overall rating
Features: Features
Performance rating: Ease of use
Value for money: Value for money
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Verdict

Pros: Works well underwater; lots of modes; compact and attractive
Cons: Narrow angle lens; convex lens distortion; poor picture and video quality
Overall: An attractive camera for outdoors and underwater enthusiasts, but it takes ugly photos and videos

Emil Larsen, Personal Computer World 06 Aug 2008

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Taking photos underwater or on the ski slopes often requires a separate water-tight housing for your digital camera.

Sanyo’s Xacti DMX-CA8 is, however, built from the ground up to be waterproof to a depth of 1.5m for 60 minutes.

The DMX-CA8 hides its waterproofing features well, with rubber padding sealing the battery, USB and SD compartment. It withstood our informal testing comfortably.

Its pistol-grip design presents an array of easy-to-use buttons and the menu system is intuitive, presenting many interesting options including 10-shot burst and webcam modes.

At its core, the DMX-CA8 uses an eight-megapixel Cmos sensor for photos and a high bitrate (6Mbits/sec) 60fps (frames per second) VGA video mode.

The lens is 38mm equivalent, which is very narrow, leaving photos looking noticeably more restrictive than most cameras with a 35mm lens. However, if you’re interested in zooming in on objects in the distance the Xacti’s narrow angle lens and 5x optical zoom is fine.

For picture quality, we tested the Sanyo Xacti against a two-year-old Canon Ixus 60 compact digital camera, which produces reasonable picture quality and can still be bought for £100.

When focusing on objects less than 1m away, there was also considerable convex lens distortion and the Xacti looked blurry, darker and even blocky in places compared with the old Canon ­ in fact the Xacti produces some of the worst photos we’ve seen from an eight-megapixel camera.

Worse still, video quality on the highest setting was noisy and compression artefacts visible. We blame Sanyo’s choice of Cmos sensor and lens, which leaves you paying a rather a lot for the Xacti’s compact and waterproof chassis. Ultimately it’s an impressive design that’s let down by poor performance.


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Tags: Digital Cameras, Sanyo

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