
Superlong, yet wide lens; manual exposure controls; good body design; supports wireless flash
Softness and noise hurt picture quality; middling performance
Olympus' 8-megapixel superzoom generally improves over its SP-550 UZ predecessor, but suffers from many of the same problems
6.6 Good
Reviewed by Will Greenwald
Last year, Olympus released the SP-550 UZ, a 7-megapixel digital camera with an impressive 18x zoom lens. We loved its lens' long reach and wide angle, and appreciated its great body design. Unfortunately, the camera was plagued with performance and picture quality issues.
Now Olympus offers the SP-560 UZ, a £200, 8-megapixel follow-up. It carries over both good and bad aspects of last year's camera, but overall presents an improvement.
Design
Body design was one of our favourite aspects of the SP-550 UZ, so we were pleased to see that the new version looks and feels almost identical. Every design aspect is carried over, from the pop-up flash to the comfortably large, flat buttons. It even weighs nearly the same, standing at a hefty but manageable 365g with four AA batteries and an xD memory card.
A whopping big lens stands out as the SP-560 UZ's most prominent feature, just like its predecessor. The 27-486mm-equivalent lens is slightly wider and shorter than the SP-550 UZ's 28-504mm-equivalent lens, but still offers the same f/2.8-4.5 range and 18x optical zoom. Sensor-shift image stabilisation helps reduce camera shake, a vital feature when pushing the camera to its full zoom without a tripod to stabilise it.
Features
Like most superzooms, the SP-560 UZ targets experienced users, and so it's packed full of useful, advanced features. An electronic viewfinder
offers a great alternative to the camera's 64mm (2.5-inch) LCD screen for
framing shots, especially when shooting in direct sunlight.
The camera toggles between EVF and LCD screen, so you can't have both running at once. However, when shooting with the EVF, pictures still appear on the LCD screen by default, so you have to take your face away from the viewfinder to review what you just shot. The SP-560 UZ also includes a full selection of exposure controls, including program, aperture-priority, shutter-priority and manual shooting modes.
While it didn't come loaded on our review sample, version 3.1 of the
SP-560 UZ firmware adds support for Olympus wireless flash units. If you
install the optional firmware upgrade through the included Olympus
Master 2 software (instructions can be found
Performance
In our tests, the SP-560 UZ far surpassed its slow predecessor but otherwise showed middling performance. It's responsive enough to shoot without much trouble, but it feels sluggish at times. After a 2.4-second wait from power-on to first shot, the camera could record a new JPEG every 2.1 seconds with the onboard flash turned off. With the flash enabled, that wait bumped up to 2.5 seconds between shots.
Raw shooting was quite slow, capturing a single uncompressed picture every 13.5 seconds, though that's not abnormal for a non-dSLR. Raw shooting is a welcome feature on any non-dSLR camera, but the extra long shot-to-shot time definitely limits its usefulness. The shutter lagged a slightly sluggish 0.6 seconds with our high-contrast target, and 1.5 seconds with our low-contrast target.
In burst mode, the camera captured 11 full-resolution JPEGs in 9.7 seconds for an average rate of 1.1 frames per second. The camera also features a high-speed burst mode that can shoot 15 still photos a second, though it can only record at 1280x960 pixels or lower resolution, and doesn't refocus between shots.
Image quality
Unfortunately, the SP-560 UZ's biggest feature is also one of its
greatest weaknesses. While its lens is long and wide, it simply isn't
very sharp. Regardless of the lens position and focus, pictures taken
on the SP-560 UZ generally look soft. Fine details, like text focused
upon from a great distance, can appear fuzzy regardless of focus,
shutter speed or ISO sensitivity.
| Typical shot-to-shot time | |
Time to first shot | |
Shutter lag (typical) | |
Beyond the softness, significant
noise further hurts the camera's pictures. Notable grain appears at ISO
200, and gets significantly worse as sensitivity gets higher. At ISO
400 and higher, noise consumes fine details, rendering textures muddled.
Conclusion
If you want a camera with an extremely long lens for around £200, the Olympus SP-560 UZ is one of only a few choices available by retail. The
Additional editing by Shannon Doubleday
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