Pentax has revealed its first camera designed to bridge the gap between a compact camera and a digital SLR.
The Pentax X70 features a 12-million-pixel CCD imaging sensor and a 24x, f/2.8, lens delivering the 35mm viewing angle equivalent of a 26-624mm zoom.
A digital zoom boosts magnification to ‘150x’ to deliver the equivalent of a 3900mm, according to Pentax.
Armoury includes Face Recognition, aperture and shutter priority and CCD sensor shift type Shake Reduction, which is designed to minimise camera shake.
Priced £369.99 – and due to arrive in the UK this month – the X70 incorporates a nine-point AF system and a 2.7in LCD screen with a resolution of 230,000 pixels.
It shoots JPEG format images only.
Pentax claims that the lens can focus down to 1cm in Macro mode. The camera delivers a maximum burst rate of 11 frames per second (at a resolution of 5MP).
Also on board the SD/SDHC memory card compatible newcomer is a 1280×720 pixel movie mode option.
The photographer can manually set white balance and apply exposure compensation of plus or minus 2EV in 1/3 EV steps.
The X70 boasts a top shutter speed of 1/4000sec and a spot metering option.
Digital Shake Reduction makes use of the camera’s maximum equivalent ISO of 6400.
A Digital Wide function aims to produce an extra wide angle image, equivalent to one delivered by a 20mm lens, by combining two separate photos.
Photographers can choose from digital filter options including b&w, ‘fisheye’ and sepia.
The X70 measures 110.5×82.5×89.5mm (excluding protrusions) and weighs 390g (without battery).