That was my first "real" digital camera (S5200 is the North American model) after 2 or 3 years of using an Olympus D560 Zoom. My […]
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386SX wrote on 2024-11-10, 12:24:
Today I repaired an old 2006 second hand Fujifilm S5600 camera using a second not working unit. Had to only change the internal battery plastics/cover but unfortunately I've broken a button metal pin from the inside of.the working one and had to switch all the hardware into the second unit (when I was supposed to do the opposite) whole optic included. A painful work in such compact case space with flat cables and old fragile components. Now at least one unit is fully working and with a just bought brand new 512MB memory card quite expensive too. This camera is interesting cause one of the early Super CCD sensor based cameras from Fujifilm, an interesting concept discontinued after various versions a decade ago. Of course not great compared to nowdays standards but still has a good optic (F2.8>3.2 at 10X zoom).
That was my first "real" digital camera (S5200 is the North American model) after 2 or 3 years of using an Olympus D560 Zoom. My mother still has that S5200 . It's in a box somewhere. I need to ask her about taking it for a spin again after all this time. Hopefully, the coin cell hasn't leaked.
EDIT: Those 🤣 cards sucked, speed wise, especially the slower M variants, AFAICR. RAW was painfully slow, AFAICR. Not sure if the faster H variants actually were faster in the S5200 (or if they even worked, they might have required s firmware update). Anyway, this is all stuff you probably already know or can still find in the Internet.
I wonder what drew you to this camera in the ccurrent day and age? Was it something you used back in the day ? Fascination with SuperCCD ?
EDIT2: AF speed and accuracy was very good in decent light, for uts time, AFAICR. I am really starting to miss this thing. As, I have archives of all the photos I've taken, I might just have a go at reprocessing some RAWs. DXO Pureraw does not support this, so I will have to rely on RawTherapee and NeatImage.