The Hunt for the Best Ultra-Compact Camera
by Stephen Caston on October 5, 2004 12:05 AM EST- Posted in
- Digital Camera
Final Words
The Canon PowerShot S410, Casio Exilim Ex-Z40, and Pentax Optio S40 are cameras with similar dimensions and features. All three cameras offer a 3x optical zoom and 4 megapixel output. In addition, all three cameras have similar exposure controls allowing for the adjustment of white balance, ISO setting, exposure compensation, and AF points. In our tests, however, we discovered some major performance differences.Starting with speed, the Casio Z40 has the fastest startup and shutter lag times. Also, it matches the Canon S410 with a very fast shot-to-shot time. The Pentax S40 proved to be the slowest camera with its 3.75 sec. shot-to-shot time and its super-slow 12.2 shot - to-shot w/flash time. We were also annoyed by the startup delay of the S40 while the flash charges during startup. Fortunately, we were able to disable the flash to avoid this startup wait. The Canon camera performed well in respect to shot-to-shot time with and w/out flash and also pre-focused shutter lag.
We were very impressed with the Casio Z40's auto WB performance under tungsten light. Unfortunately, with all other settings, the Z40 was either overexposed or had a slightly cool cast. The Pentax S40 showed decent color reproduction other than the occasional cool cast and underexposure. Overall, the Canon S410 showed the most accurate color reproduction capability. In addition, the S410 consistently produced vibrant, well-saturated, and balanced exposures.
We not only found the Canon to have the best color reproduction, but also the best resolution. In our resolution chart, the Canon S410 and Pentax S40 showed similar performances. They both proved to capture great detail. However, the S410 produced the clearest chart with a bit more resolving power than the S40. The Casio Z40 showed decent resolution. However, we noticed some moiré at its limits. When it comes to noise performance, the Canon takes the lead again. At ISO 400, the S410 retains an incredible amount of detail. The Pentax S40 came in a close second with a fair amount of detail, while the Casio Z40 was the worst with a large loss of detail.
In the end, we had to choose the Canon PowerShot S410 as the best camera of the bunch. It produces bright, colorful, well-exposed, and sharp pictures very consistently. The Pentax Optio S40 would be our second choice because of its impressive image quality and long battery life. The Casio Exilim Ex-Z40 had a lot of potential to be a great camera. For example, it has the smallest build, largest LCD monitor, fastest startup time, extraordinary battery life, and wonderful auto white balance in tungsten lighting. However, it simply does not deliver images that are of the same quality as the S410. It produces images with jaggies visible along straight lines and a high level of noise. Also, there is no option to select metering and it does not offer TV-out capability. To top things off, it is the most expensive of these three cameras. The choice always comes down to the user. If speed is more important than image quality, perhaps the Casio Z40 is the perfect camera. We chose a more well-balanced camera with excellent image quality: the Canon PowerShot S410.
Canon S410 | |
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Casio Ex-Z40 | |
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Pentax S40 | |
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Thanks again to Newegg.com for loaning us the Canon PowerShot S410, Casio Exilim Ex-Z40, and Pentax Optio S40 for review.
14 Comments
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araczynski - Tuesday, October 5, 2004 - link
my classic Kodak DC240 is still kicking ass and taking names :) years later and I still could care less what else is out there :)Next camera will probably be video anyway, not much use (to a general consumer) for a still shot only camera (yeah, the crappy wanna be video mode doesn't count)
WooDaddy - Tuesday, October 5, 2004 - link
Canons are very good. I agree.Just to put it out there.. Don't forget the Minolta G400. It falls in the same category as well: 4MP, VERY small, 3x zoom, movie mode, <$300. The selling point for me was the very fast shot to shot time and the dual MS and SD slots. Startup time is probably on par if not faster than the Casio. Image quality is very good as well. AF isn't probably as good or controllable as the Canon though. The demonstration of the Canon AF feature is helpful; I wish I knew it worked like that before I got my Minolta. The Minolta requires more tinkering that most but once you get the hang of it, it's OK.
Either way the G400 is a camera that shouldn't be ignored.
noxipoo - Tuesday, October 5, 2004 - link
I have canon S230 and I have used a S400, S500 extensively and they have always rocked. I have used older models that my friends have also. We all get canon for the consistent image quality, in the end its all that really matters.John1177 - Saturday, January 16, 2021 - link
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