
Solid construction; good wide-angle lens; hot shoe
No zoom lens; no built-in optical viewfinder; slow start up; clunky converter lens design
The GR Digital II is a cute compact camera that might appeal to street photographers looking to step away from a rangefinder and into digital, but it doesn't deliver the features, performance or image quality it should given its steep price tag
6.2 Good
Reviewed by Philip Ryan
Zoom lenses have become so ubiquitous in cameras these days that people take them for granted, despite the fact that they have no trouble using a disposable camera at a wedding or on an action-packed vacation.
Ricoh is banking that there are enough people who can skip the convenience of a zoom lens. In fact, it's so confident that it has introduced the GR Digital II, a follow-up to their first foray into the fixed-focal-length digital world, which was known as the GR Digital. It's available now for around £300.
Design
The GR Digital II sports a 28mm-equivalent lens, which feeds light to a 10.1-megapixel CCD sensor, while a 69mm (2.7-inch) LCD screen on the back lets you frame your shot. Instead of a built-in optical viewfinder, Ricoh offers a couple of accessory viewfinders that occupy the hot shoe: one -- the GV-2 -- provides a 28mm field of view for the built-in lens. The other -- the GV-1 -- can span 21-28mm, making it a perfect companion for the wide-angle conversion lens -- the GW-1, which turns the built-in lens into a 21mm-equivalent.
If that's not enough, there's also the GT-1, a telephoto conversion lens that narrows the field of view to an equivalent of 40mm. Both lens converters require the use of the main lens adaptor -- GH-1, which also ships with a lens hood, to cut down on any flare you might encounter when using the built-in lens.
The conversion lens system on the GR Digital II is rather clunky. We found it difficult to remove the ring that covers the main adaptor's bayonet mount at first -- though it loosened in time, and we had some trouble fitting the main adaptor on to the camera. The lenses screw on to the adaptor, so that wasn't difficult, but a better bayonet mount for the adaptor would be a good idea.
Also, the ring that covers the bayonet mount when the adaptor's not in use feels very flimsy. Worst of all, the tiny pop-up flash becomes partially blocked when you use either of the conversion lenses.
Features
For a camera that costs as much as the GR Digital II does, it's absurd that the company didn't just build in a viewfinder. However, anyone accustomed to street photography with a rangefinder will find Ricoh's approach familiar, since the wide-angle lenses used in street photography usually require optional shoe-mounted viewfinders on those cameras.
Because there's no zoom lens, the GR Digital II doesn't need a zoom rocker, so don't be fooled by the rocker switch they put where you'd normally find the zoom control. Instead, this rocker provides quick access to the camera's exposure compensation control when shooting, or zoom during playback. A nifty side-to-side rocking switch also lets you access exposure compensation, as well as white balance and ISO. Ricoh includes full manual exposure, along with aperture-priority and program mode. Strangely, they didn't include shutter-priority, though you can shift the exposure in program mode -- which some cameras don't allow.
For a compact camera, there's a fair amount of customisation available in the GR Digital II. There are two customisable shooting modes: you can set the zoom rocker to access many other functions if you don't want to use it for exposure compensation, and you can do the same with the function button on the left of the four-way keypad you use to navigate the menus.
Performance
The GR Digital II didn't blow us away with its
performance, but wasn't painfully slow either. The main area it could
speed up is at start-up. The camera took 4.4 seconds to start up and
capture its first JPEG. Subsequent JPEGs took 1.4 seconds between shots
with the flash turned off and 1.8 seconds with the flash turned on It
took 2.1 seconds between raw shots, which is quite fast for a compact
camera, though it still might feel a bit slow in practice.
Shutter
lag measured 0.7 seconds in our high-contrast test and 1.3 seconds in
our low contrast test, which mimic bright and dim shooting conditions
respectively. Continuous shooting yielded an average of 2.3 frames per
second.
| Typical shot-to-shot time | |
Time to first shot | |
Shutter lag (typical) | |
Image quality
Images from the GR Digital II are not nearly as good as they should be
for a camera of this price. The colours aren't quite as accurate as
most compact cameras, though they still look natural, so most users
should still be pleased with the results.
More pressing is that the images aren't all that sharp. We've seen sharper results from cameras that cost half as much as this one. Given that the lens is a fixed focal length and that it extends from the camera body, which gives more leeway for the designers to include a better lens, the GR Digital II just doesn't deliver what it should in this case. Ricoh really should've gone with a completely internal lens, which would've made the camera faster at start-up.
The GR Digital II's noise isn't very pretty either. Even at its lowest sensitivity setting, the GR Digital II has some minor noise, though you probably won't notice it in prints. It doesn't become very noticeable until ISO 200, though that's still not stellar performance in today's compact camera market.
However, there isn't much sharpness or shadow detail lost to noise at ISO 200. By ISO 400, noise detracts noticeably from the images, a large amount of sharpness is lost and shadow detail begins its precipitous demise. At ISO 800 noise is quite heavy and most of the sharpness and shadow detail is gone. Conditions only get worse at the camera's top sensitivity of ISO 1,600. We suggest staying below ISO 400 if possible on this camera and wouldn't suggest using ISO 800 or ISO 1,600 at all.
Conclusion
Sony's top T-series models and Canon's most expensive compact models
tend to deliver sharper images and don't nearly cost as much as this
Ricoh. Of course, they don't have manual exposure controls, and the
ones on the GR Digital II are quite handy. They also don't have hot shoes,
though we can't imagine how unwieldy the Ricoh would be with a hot-shoe
flash on top of it.
Given its price, we'd have to point someone toward the Fujifilm
Additional editing by Nick Hide
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