Pentax Point and Shoot and Non-DSLR
Home > Digital Camera Reviews > Pentax Digital Cameras > Pentax Point and Shoot and Non-DSLR

Pentax Optio S55 Digital Camera Review

by Patrick Singleton
Published on July 29, 2005

Navigation


 

Likes
-Good fit and finish
-Simple styling
-Very simple options for automatic settings
-Large LCD screen 
Dislikes
-Ridiculously short battery life
-AA batteries, rather than dedicated rechargeable pack
-No manual mode (except for white balance)
-LCD in live view looks like an old T.V. with bad reception
-Short zoom range
-The camera does not have a "Sports" scene mode, and is too slow for quick action
-There is no setting in which the flash fires only once -- it either fires twice or not at all. 

Conclusion
Many fundamental aspects of the Optio S55 – its size, 5 megapixel CCD, 3x optical zoom lens, 115,000-pixel LCD, $250-or-so street price – are decidedly middle-of-the-road. There are loads of cameras with those specs, because many, many snapshooters will get the results they want with cameras like that. The camera is easy to use in automatic mode and built well enough to survive rough handling – if you forget about it in the bottom of your backpack for a while, it will probably emerge okay. The on-screen help features should be useful to casual users as well. Unfortunately, the S55 also contains some glaring flaws that will frustrate even the most complacent snapshooter. Pentax heavily markets the camera’s large LCD screen, omitting the fact that its quality is extremely substandard, making it difficult to accurately perceive the frame and review images. There is also no manual mode included, forcing those beginner users looking to grow into the medium to look elsewhere or buy multiple cameras. Furthermore, the S55 eats through batteries faster than any other camera that we have reviewed, and for those who like the freedom of AAs, the seemingly affordable point-and-shoot will soon become a constant cash-consumer. Therefore, those users looking to learn more about photography should look at other cameras that offer more manual control, but for the snapshooter on a tight budget, with a slight decrease in price (below $200), the S55 would be a reasonable choice.


Reviews   |   About DCI   |   Staff   |   Advertising   |   Sitemap   |   Report an Error

© Copyright 2008 DigitalCameraInfo.com, all rights reserved. All trademarks and product names are property of their respective owners. DigitalCameraInfo.com makes no guarantees regarding any of the advice offered on this web site or by its staff or users. All user comments and postings are not the responsibility of DigitalCameraInfo.com.