Canon's 4-megapixel PowerShot A430 is a bit of an oddity these days. New 4-megapixel cameras have all but gone the way of vinyl records and slide projectors. With even bargain-bin digital cameras sporting 5-megapixel sensors, why is Canon releasing the A430? The Canon PowerShot A430 is an upgraded version of the bottom-of-the-line 3-megapixel PowerShot A410, which it replaces as Canon's cheap, no-frills digital camera. In that role, the camera actually performs pretty well. Despite some irritating image-quality problems, the A430 is a nice, simple point-and-shoot camera with solid performance and a decent feature set.
Design
The blocky A430 is about the size of a large bar of soap; the right size to fit into a jacket pocket or a purse. Its silver plastic body feels solid and weighs a relatively light 213g with two AA batteries and an SD card. Its LCD is a puny 1.8 inches, but the small screen leaves room for a surprisingly decent optical viewfinder.
The control layout is direct and Canon-standard, with big buttons that feel comfortable even for big thumbs. The back panel of the camera holds almost all of the A430's controls, taking advantage of the room that its tiny screen leaves unoccupied. The back holds a control pad that doubles as a zoom rocker and flash/macro control, a mode wheel, and four buttons for display, menu, function/OK, and printing, a fairly standard arrangement for cameras in this category. The shutter release and power buttons sit in solitude on the top side of the camera, separate from any other controls.
Features
The A430 actually has some decent features for its price class, including a 4x zoom lens that gives it a slightly longer reach than most competitors. However, with a focal range of 39mm to 156mm (35mm equivalent) and a maximum aperture of F2.8 to F5.8, it's fairly slow with a narrow angle of view. The lens is also strangely noisy, especially when the camera powers on and off. The camera supports sensitivity settings from ISO 64 to ISO 400, although shots taken at ISO 200 and above tend to be full of visual noise.
In addition to flexible manual operation, the Canon PowerShot A430 supplies a decent handful of scene presets, including portrait, snow, beach, and night modes. Like other current Canon models, it also offers Color Accent and Color Swap, two quirky features that let the photographer isolate or change a color in a photo. They're nifty for artsy, black-and-white-with-a-red-balloon shots, but they're not really useful features. The A430 also has a movie mode that can record VGA videos but only at 10fps; its lower-resolution 320 x 240 mode can handle 30fps.
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