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Olympus FE-170

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Olympus FE-170
 
Sony Cyber-shot DSC-W380 Casio Exilim EX-G1 Samsung NX10 Ricoh GXR with A12

List price as of Nov 29, 2006:
S$299

Product Summary


Average

5.6

out of 10

View score

The good: Simple to use; inexpensive.

The bad: Terrible performance.

The bottom line: The Olympus FE 170's price is hard to beat; its performance, not so much.

Read full review of the Olympus FE-170 »

 

Average User Rating

from 1 users


Mediocre

4

out of 10
 

How would you rate this product?

 
 

CNET Asia Review

By Will Greenwald, CNET.com


On paper, the Olympus FE-170 is almost identical to its brother, the FE-180. Both have the same 6-megapixel sensor, the same 38mm-to-114mm (35mm equivalent) zoom lens, and the same emphasis on simplified, automated photography. In actual use, however, the FE-170 is far inferior to its bigger brother. The approximate US$30 difference between the two cameras represent some heavily cut corners in this cheaper model.

Design And Features
Both cameras share the FE series' emphasis on simplicity over control. Besides macro, flash, and EV compensation, the only way you can change the cameras' settings is through its various scene presets. They automatically control aperture, shutter, focus, and even ISO sensitivity and white balance. Basically, the camera runs almost completely on autopilot. Casual shooters may find this convenient, but more advanced photographers will miss tweaking their shots.

Performance
Automated shooting isn't necessarily a bad thing if the automated aspects work well. Unfortunately, this is where the FE-170 parts ways with the FE-180. While both are automated, the FE-180 uses Olympus's TruePic Turbo image processor. The FE-170's unbranded image processor is the main cause of its performance woes. The camera takes 5.7 seconds from power-on to first shot, and every shot thereafter suffers a wait of 4.8 seconds without flash. With the onboard flash enabled, that wait becomes an even-longer 5.5 seconds. Shutter lag was almost as painful, taking a full 1.3 seconds from shutter release to shot. These numbers are more than double what we saw with the FE-180, which offered a 1.6-second shot-to-shot time and a shutter lag of just 0.6 second.

Because of its terrible performance and mediocre shots, the Olympus FE-170 really isn't worth your time or money. If you really want an inexpensive, easy-to-use snapshot camera, spend the extra $30 and get the Olympus FE-180. It has all of the good qualities of the FE-170 and few of the bad. As a bonus, the FE-180 comes with a set of rechargeable batteries and a wall charger. Sometimes spending a little extra can go a long way.

Shooting speed
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Typical shot-to-shot time  
Time to first shot  
Shutter lag (typical)  
Olympus FE-170
4.8 
5.7 
1.3 
Samsung L60
2 
2.1 
0.7 
Olympus FE-180
1.6 
1.7 
0.6 
Sony Cyber-shot DSC-S600
1.3 
1.8 
0.4 
Note: Seconds

Image Quality
Image quality was similarly disappointing. While the FE-180 displayed very good white balance with tungsten lights, the FE-170's tungsten shots looked almost like old-timey sepia prints. Beyond the severe yellowing, processing artifacts obscured and softened fine details. Noise wasn't very noticeable, but we couldn't run our full gamut of noise tests because of the camera's total lack of ISO control. Also, the FE-170 has a sensitivity range of ISO 64 to ISO 400, though since the ISO isn't recorded in EXIF data, there's no way of actually telling what sensitivity setting the camera chooses for a given shot.

 

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User Reviews

A below average budget camera



Rating: 4 out of 10 (Mediocre)
Pros: Large LCD, scene presets
Cons: Poor image quality
Opinion:
A disappointing product from Olympus. Indoor pictures appeared grainy. Sold away the set after 6 months.

 

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