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DPInterface Canon PowerShot A630 Review
Canon's latest full-featured camera is here with the A630. The A630 along with the higher resolution A640 are updates to 2005's well received A610/A620. These two new cameras offer more resolution, a larger 2.5 inch LCD, higher sensitivities and the same full manual controls as well as great battery life. Find out if the A630 is a worthy successor now. Canon A-series comparison Here's a nice and helpful comparison table of the five A-series cameras that Canon has released this year:
*As of December 25th, 2006 Size and Weight (197.6) 90.4 x 64.0 x 43.2 mm (170 g) - Canon PowerShot A530/A540 The Canon PowerShot A630/A640 are the largest cameras in the group. The A630/A640 pair are midsized cameras, which are bigger than typical compacts but not as huge as you think. They certainly can't fit into your pocket without a struggle but should go into purses, bags and larger pockets with ease. Open up the Box The Canon PowerShot A630 includes an average bundle:
Storage and Power The included memory card is virtually useless with the A630 packing 8 megapixels. I'd recommend getting at least a 1 GB high-speed (around 60X) SD card. The camera takes advantage of high-speed cards and the performance increase is noticeable. The A630 supports SDHC cards as well (above 2 GB). 360 shots - Canon PowerShot A530/A540 The Canon PowerShot A630 maintains the great battery life of 500 shots per charge (CIPA Standard) despite the increase in LCD size. The only cameras which outdo the A630/A640 twins are the Fujifilm F31 and Pentax M20. Oh, and since the included batteries are throwaway ones, you'd wanna get a set of 4 or 8 NiMH rechargeable batteries and a quick 15 minute charger.
Extras As with the other A-series PowerShot cameras, the A630 is quite expandable:
Camera Tour The Canon PowerShot A630 feels solid and not "cheap". The camera has a grip and all the controls are on the right side, making one hand shooting easy.
The Canon A630 has a 4X zoom lens equivalent to 35 - 140 mm. The aperture range is f2.8 - f4.1, which is faster than on most cameras. On the bottom right is a button to eject the ring around the lens and put on the conversion lens adapter. To the upper right, there's a fairly powerful flash unit which has a range of 45 cm to 4.2 m at wide-angle and up to 3.0 m at telephoto. The AF-assist/self-timer lamp and optical viewfinder are located to the left of the flash. And just below the "Canon" logo is the microphone.
The Canon PowerShot A630 features a rotating 2.5 inch LCD, and in the photo above, you can see it in action.
The A630 ups the LCD size to a large 2.5 inch rotating LCD. The LCD can flip out and rotate forwards for self portraits or down for overhead shots. The resolution is still on the low side with 115,000 pixels but it's not noticeable. Visibility was good in both outdoor and low-light conditions. Above the LCD, there's a tiny optical viewfinder with 2 status lights beside it. It proved useful when I wanted to take a quick shot, conserve batteries and also make picture taking less conspicuous (somehow that's true). Then there's all the other controls on the right side of the camera. The mode switch moves the camera between shooting and playback. Next is the exposure compensation/delete photo button and print button. The print button lights up when the camera is connected to the printer. A directional controller gives you quick access to some functions:
The FUNCtion button brings up a screen with almost all the settings you'll need including (this is only for program mode - in auto or any scene mode, then most of the settings will be locked up):
The custom color option allows you to change red, green, blue and skin tone values as well as sharpness, contrast and saturation. In menus, the FUNCtion button doubles as the SET or okay button. The DISPlay button toggles the amount of information displayed when shooting or playing back and can turn the LCD off while shooting so you can use the viewfinder. Holding down that button will push LCD backlighting to its maximum setting. The MENU button brings up a menu with other camera settings you won't be changing as often.
Up here, there's a power button, shutter button with a wrapped around zoom lever and a speaker. But the thing you'd want to check out over here is the mode dial:
On one side of the camera, there's USB 2.0 High Speed, DC-IN and A/V Out ports while the other side is left blank. At the bottom of the A630, there's a plastic tripod mount and battery/memory card compartment. The door is fairly sturdy here although the batteries lack a latch/lock to secure them into place while swapping memory cards. Shooting
The A630 displays a lot of shooting information on its display including exposure data although there's still no live histogram. The Canon A630 also lacks the Face Detection autofocus feature, which is found on the DIGIC III cameras such as the G7. You can select one of the Canon PowerShot A630's many image resolutions which include 8 megapixels (with a widescreen 16:9 and print 3:2 option) to VGA plus three compression options - Superfine, Fine and Normal. I find that most users (not only me) normally use full resolution with Fine for everyday shooting and SuperFine only for very important shots. The A630 has a 1 cm macro mode, so you can get really close to your subject. The A630 also features a full suite of manual controls - the manual exposure modes I mentioned earlier as well as things like custom white balance. Recording Featuring the same movie mode as cameras before it, the Canon PowerShot A630 takes VGA movies with sound at 30 FPS till the memory card fills up. Each movie clip is limited to 1 GB which is around 8 to 9 minutes. If you want to record longer clips, the frame rate is selectable with 30 FPS or 15 FPS. You can lower the resolution down to QVGA (320 x 240) as well. A 160 x 120 option records tiny movies for e-mail at 15 FPS up to 3 minutes. Exposure is automatically adjusted while recording while focus is fixed and only digital zoom can be used while recording. Movie quality was overall quite good, as with the other Canon cameras. Performance The Canon PowerShot A630 starts up quickly in a little over a second. The A630 normally takes about 1/4 to 1/2 second at telephoto. Low-light focusing was excellent with the AF-assist beam. Shutter lag is not obvious at all except at telephoto in low-light. Shot-to-shot speed was at a rate of 1 shot every 1.3 seconds, longer if the flash is used. Flash recharge time using a fully charged set of NiMH batteries took 2 seconds. The camera zooms from wide-angle to telephoto within 1.7 seconds with very few stops in between (only eight). In continuous shooting, the Canon A630 can shoot indefinitely at 1.7 FPS till the memory card fills up - provided you have a high-speed card. The LCD refreshes many times but only to show the last shot taken which makes it difficult to catch fast moving subjects - you'd wanna use that viewfinder to track moving subjects. The A630 powers down quickly within 2 seconds with the lens at telephoto. The Canon A630 feels fairly fast and comparable even to some of Canon's DIGIC III cameras. Image Quality Time to take a look to see how the Canon PowerShot A630 fares in image quality:
Noise levels are low at ISO 80 and ISO 100. At ISO 200, the noise goes up but the quality is still acceptable. Expect to do some cleaning up and noise reduction for ISO 400 photos. Things turn out quite noisy at ISO 800, you won't be wanting to use this option all the time. There's low levels chromatic aberration (color fringing) in the shots taken by the A630. Barrel distortion and redeye are noticeable while pincushion distortion is not. Colors accuracy was fairly good with nicely saturated colors but the camera tends to become confused with very dark or light colors such as purple becoming blue. Image quality is very good, and will satisfy most people. The A630 also showed improvements in the noise department versus the A610/A620. Photo gallery All the photos in the Canon PowerShot A630 photo gallery. Playback
In playback, the Canon PowerShot A630 can playback stills and movies (With sound) as well as: Protect image, print marking, sound memo, slideshow, rotate and simple movie editing. You can also magnify still photos by 10x and take a look around using the 4 arrow buttons as well as post-process photos with the My Colors features from the FUNCtion menu. The Canon PowerShot A630 shows complete info, including a histogram and exposure data.
Conclusion The Canon PowerShot A630 is a mid-sized camera which features 8 megapixels, a rotating 2.5 inch LCD and full manual controls. The A630 has great battery life, a nice grip with easy one hand operation, very good performance and even a custom option on the mode dial. I've got a few quirks about the A630 as well, though they are minor ones: the LCD has rather low resolution, there's no live histogram and unlike the entire camera which feels solid, the tripod mount is plastic. The movie mode is excellent save for the per clip limit and inability to focus and optical zoom. Despite those minor cons, the Canon PowerShot A630's feature set and price make it an excellent value for money with above average image quality and controls for everyone; from beginner to an expert. This one definitely deserves a thumbs up from me. Camera rating upon 10 (more about this): [Category: Mid-range]
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