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Editors' Rating:
8.0 of 10
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Value for money |
8 |
| • Ease of Use |
8 |
| • Performance |
8 |
| • Image Quality |
8 |
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Average User Rating:
not rated
(0 vote)
| • Value for money |
- |
| • Ease of Use |
- |
| • Performance |
- |
| • Image Quality |
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Where to Buy ?
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PROS
• Broad feature set for the money.
• Accepts accessory lenses.
• Speedy and efficient performance.
CONS
• No rechargeable batteries included. |
Includes: Canon PowerShot A85
Digital Camera, 4
AA Alkaline battery, 32 MB CompactFlash, IFC-400PCU USB cable,
AV Cable AVC-DC300,
Wrist Strap, Digital Camera Solution Disk (CD-ROM), ArcSoft Camera
Suite Disk (CD-ROM), User Guides.
Recommended
Accessories |
Canon added a megapixel to the
popular PowerShot A75 to create the 4-megapixel PowerShot A85. Like the
PowerShot A75, this camera offers a lot of versatility for an affordably
priced model, including fully manual exposure, a good selection of
automatic settings, and a broad range of adjustable controls. You can add
a lens converter to the A85's 3X zoom lens to get a wider or longer view,
and Canon also makes a compatible underwater housing for the camera. The
A85 has been upgraded with several improvements we saw introduced in the
PowerShot A75 including six new 'special scene modes', 9-point AiAF, VGA
movie clips (10 fps, up to 30 secs) and a larger 1.8" LCD monitor. The A85
also features Canon's single-button Print/Share feature for immediate
transfer to a USB connected PC or Printer.
PowerShot
A85 Major Features:
| • |
3x Zoom Digital Camera featuring 4 effective
megapixels. |
| • |
4 effective megapixels for 2,272 x 1,704-pixel images.
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1.8-inch low temperature polycrystalline silicon TFT Color LCD. |
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3x optical zoom lens, 5.4-16.2mm (equivalent to a
35-105mm lens on a 35mm camera) with auto and manual focus. |
| • |
Digital zoom up to 3.6x magnification. |
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9-point AiAF or single centre point focusing. |
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Exclusive Canon XImage Processor and iSAPS Technology
for faster processing and excellent image quality. |
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Exposure control:
program AE, aperture priority, shutter priority, manual exposure. |
| • |
Auto exposure mode for different recording situations (full
auto, portrait, landscape, night scene, high shutter speeds, slow
shutter speeds, foilage, beach, snow, fireworks, underwater, indoors). |
| • |
Adjustable white balance for various light conditions (automatic,
daylight sunny/overcast, incandescent light, two settings for
fluorescent light, manual). |
| • |
Various methods of exposure metering (matrix resp. evaluative metering
coupled with/without active focus field, centre-weighted average
metering, spot metering). |
| • |
ISO sensitivity equivalents: 50, 100, 200, and 400. |
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Adjustable aperture settings from f/2.8 to f/4.8. |
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15 sec. -
1/2000 sec. shutter speed. |
| • |
Flash
modes: Auto, On, Off, Manual (Red Eye On/Off). |
| • |
Vivid, Neutral, Low Sharpening, Sepia and Black & White
photo effects. |
| • |
Self
timer (2sec. or 10sec.) |
| • |
"My
Camera" mode. |
| • |
Stitch Assist mode for perfect panoramas. |
| • |
Sound
Memo (up to 60 sec.) |
| • |
Movie mode w/sound, 640x480 for up to 30 secs, 320x240 up to 3 minutes. |
| • |
Powered
by 4 AA Alkaline battery,
4 NiMH rechargeable battery or AC Adapter. |
| • |
Images saved to CompactFlash Type I
memory cards (32MB card included). |
| • |
DPOF (Digital Print Order Format)
compatibility. |
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Full Specification |
The Lowest Price is not always best !
When you buy a digital camera, the basic package almost always includes
extras such as a battery charger, lens cap, batteries, flash memory card, and software.
One of the more disreputable practices a dealer can engage in is called unbundling. These
dealers remove items from the package that are normally included in the price and
price them separately.
When purchasing
a camera you have three components of the price to consider - the camera price, postage and
handling, and taxes. Many dealers lower the price to make the camera more attractive, then
increase the postage and handling to boost their profits.
Hesitate before
accepting extended warranties. Every knowledgeable consumer expert says it's better to
gamble. Most of a company's profit is in the sale of these warranties so they press, and
press hard. Your job is to resist, and resist hard. The only thing to keep in mind is that
digital cameras can be horribly expensive to repair. If you want peace of mind, you may
want the warranty, even though it's probably overpriced. The cost of a repair can
approach, or even exceed, the original purchase price.
When you buy a
camera from a reputable dealer, you expect to be able to return it if you aren't
satisfied. Some dealers try to discourage this by requiring a restocking fee for returned
merchandise. This is always explained as a way to recover their costs of checking the
merchandise and restoring the packaging you may have opened.
Many dealers is
truly a false, deceptive and a total crook. Bait and switch tactics used. Does not sell
new merchandise and will ship used or refurbished goods without notifying customer. They then
try to charge a restock fee on top of their exobitant shipping fees to make a profit where
they could not on their goods. A try case of buyer beware.
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Where To Buy
Canon PowerShot A85 Digital Camera:
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