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Olympus C-3020 Zoom

A bargain-priced, full featured 3 megapixel model from Olympus!

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Page 4:Viewfinder

Review First Posted: 2/16/2002

Viewfinder
For composing images, the C-3020 offers the choice of a real-image optical viewfinder or 1.8-inch color LCD monitor. The optical viewfinder zooms along with the lens, but doesn't show the effect of digital zoom, which requires the LCD monitor to be active. An autofocus crosshair is in the center of the viewfinder display, useful for lining up shots, particularly with Spot Metering or Spot AF enabled. A diopter adjustment dial on the side of the eyepiece adjusts the view for eyeglass wearers. I also noticed that the viewfinder eyepiece has a fairly high eyepoint, as I could (just barely) see the entirety of the viewfinder image with the rear element of the viewfinder touching my eyeglass lenses. - I'd like a bit more eye relief, but the 3020 is definitely usable with typical eyeglasses. Two LED lamps on the right side of the eyepiece report the camera's current status. For example, the top LED lamp lights solid orange whenever the flash is charged, or flashes when the flash is still charging and the Shutter button is halfway pressed. The bottom LED lights green whenever focus is set, and flashes to report a problem focusing. I found the optical viewfinder's very to be pretty tight in my testing, showing only 78 percent of the image area with the lens at full wide angle. At full telephoto, the viewfinder showed only 79 percent of the final image area. Overly tight viewfinder displays are a pet peeve of mine, so I'd really like to see a more accurate optical viewfinder on the 3020 Zoom. (The very accurate LCD display saves the day, but the 3020's excellent power consumption with the LCD off is compromised by the need to refer to the LCD for accurate framing.)

The 1.8-inch TFT color LCD monitor has approximately 123,000 pixels in its display. The Display button just adjacent to it serves as the monitor's "power" button, turning it on or off. In all record modes, the LCD monitor reports the current camera settings, as well as the shutter speed and aperture values selected. Through the settings menu, you can adjust the overall brightness of the LCD monitor, as well as determine whether or not an image is displayed for a short time immediately after capture. Thanks to the inclusion of the small status display panel on top of the camera, you can pretty well operate without the LCD monitor, using the optical viewfinder for composition (saving a great deal of battery power), but as noted the optical viewfinder isn't terribly accurate. I was impressed with the LCD monitor's frame accuracy, which was approximately 98 percent at both the wide-angle and telephoto lens positions. I like to see LCD monitors with frame accuracy as close to 100% as possible, so the 98 percent the 3020's LCD viewfinder offers is pretty good.

In Playback mode, the LCD monitor reports the quality setting, date, time, and the number of images on the memory card. This display shows up for a few seconds and then disappears. Through the Playback menu, you can change the Info page to include more exposure details. (The Display button serves no function in this mode.) My only complaint with these information displays is the short time the display appears, and that there seems to be no way of extending the display time. That said, I do appreciate the ability to double-check the exposure settings of previously acquired images. The LCD also offers an index display (of 4, 9, or 16 images), as well as an image enlargement tool.


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