Review: Fujifilm S6500fd with sample images

The Fujifilm S6500fd is the latest camera to use Fuji's 6th Generation CDD, first seen in the Fujifilm F30. The S6500fd boasts some impressive features, including Face Detection, ISO 3200 and a 10.7x optical zoom lens. This article looks at its main features in detail and includes sample images.

Published in Photography on Saturday, September 30, 2006 by Ben Vallack
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Overview and background:

Having bought a Fuji F30 a few months ago, Paul, and I, were both very impressed by its new 6th Generation CCD. Its only 6.3 mega pixels but, as Fuji claim, it produces much clearer images than most. Of course, the F30 is a compact camera and is somewhat lacking in the Zoom department. At 3x optical I knew it would leave me wanting more. Luckily it wasn't long before Fuji announced a bigger camera that uses the same excellent chip, the S6500fd, which boasted a 10.7x optical zoom lens. After a few months wait until the camera hit the shelves I made the decision to order one, I hadn't seen any test images or read a review on the camera, as I couldn't find any on Google! It is for this reason that I am writing this review.

Key features.

Face Detection.

If you've already looked at the Fuji S6500fd specs, you will have gathered that Fuji are rather proud if its new Face Detection technology. As one of its main selling features it would be rather inappropriate for me not to cover it here.

I must admit, it wasn't the reason I bought the camera and I would have bought it had it not featured Face Detection. However, the feature did sound useful and now, having used the camera, I can confirm that it does what is expected of it and works well.

Pressing a button on the rear of the camera enables the feature and its status is then indicated on the screen. As you point the camera at a subject, any faces that appear in the shot are surrounded by a little green square. It can't help but provide a level of geeky satisfaction as you watch the green reticule follow faces around the screen in real-time.

It's not flawless and it quite often looses faces if they're not upright and facing the camera front on. None the less it's definitely better to have it than not.

The Face Detection feature is also accompanied by two Face Detection playback modes. These are found in the slideshow settings under the 'F' menu in playback mode. The two Face Detection specific modes in this menu are 'Normal' and 'Fade'. When enabled, either of these modes will first display the image as normal, then consecutively display each face in the shot individually, filling the screen. Obviously, if 'Fade' is selected this will happen with a smooth cross-fade between the images. The feature works very well and is great for showing the subjects the pictures of themselves after taking the picture.

10.7x Lens

This is clearly one of the biggest selling points for the camera. This becomes apparent as soon as you remove the camera from the box. It dominates the cameras design, making up roughly half its bulk. It has a big, chunky, manual zoom grip that feels smooth, if a bit 'light', as you turn it, dramatically extending the lens further towards your subject.

The lens is crisp at both ends of its range and I haven't noticed any softening around the edges. However, like the F30, chromatic aberrations are an issue, albeit not a big one. It seems to be most prominent on the edges of high contrast areas, as long as both the light area and the dark area are actually exposed. If, for example, the lighter area is overexposed and starts to blow out, no chromatic aberrations are visible. See the sample images at the end of the review for examples. There are various techniques available for removing this effect in post-production and I won't go into them here.

ISO 3200

The ISO options on the Fuji S6500fd range from 100 to an astonishing 3200. Most cameras top out at somewhere between 400 and 800 and suffer heavily from aggressive noise at the highest levels. The S6500fd (and the F30) seem to have almost eliminated the noise issues. Noise on the ISO 400 and 800 settings is barely noticeable, and even on 1600 noise is still relatively minimal. The quality does degrade quite heavily on 1600 and 3200 but in a subtle kind of way, resembling a blotchy watercolour painting. Certainly the higher sensitivity is a great feature to have as it means you can prolong turning on the flash until the very darkest of settings.

Incidentally, the flash on the S6500fd is rather neat. It's an SLR style flip-up type that automatically pops up when it's needed with a satisfying 'flick' (providing you haven't suppressed the flash).

Noteworthy Features

Macro mode

The macro mode can be enabled at any position of the zoom lens, gradually pushing the minimum focal length from 10cm at the widest angle to 90cm at full zoom. There's also a Super Macro mode which is only available when the lens is at its widest angle. Super Macro mode enables you to focus on objects as near as 1cm to the lens, which in practice is almost as close as you can physically get, pretty amazing.

Burst modes

An impressive set of burst modes includes, 'Top 3' (burst of 3), 'Auto Bracketing' (takes an additional 2 shots, one slightly under exposed and one slightly over exposed from your exposure setting), 'Final 3' (last 3 of a sequence of up to 40 in quick section), or 'Long Period' (continuous and slower but saves every shot). The most useful of these I found to be the 'Final 3' mode. This enables you to just fire away at something, for example a bird sitting on a tree, and as soon as it takes off you can release the trigger, confident that in those last 3 shots it would have caught the bird taking off. The continuous burst mode is very slow. Not much, if at all, faster than just taking consecutive shots in the normal manner.

Lens hood

A nice inclusion and one that I was used to with my previous camera, a Minolta A1. It's designed to reduce glare on the lens. It also really adds to the 'look' of the camera. It can be reversed and refitted for storage.

Big clear screen

The 2.5 inch screen is bright and clear. It's covering is a hard, shiny, clear plastic which is good for protection but not so good at reducing glare. In bright sunlight, reflection is so much of a problem that it becomes necessary to use the Electronic Viewfinder, which is adequate but noticeably lower resolution that the screen. The F30 has an anti-reflective matte coating, which, in a way, I was sad not to see on the S6500fd. However, the durability advantage of having a hard coating will possibly out-weigh the more sensitive anti-glare coating, depending on how the camera will be used.

Speed

On paper the start up time and focus time seem very quick. And this is quite true. However, I found that even though the camera started up very quickly there was a bit of delay for it to auto-expose. Obviously if you had the camera on manual mode and all perfectly set up you could turn on and take a picture very quickly. In reality though, this delay is noticeable. It's still a very fast camera and during normal shooting it's possible to focus and take pictures very quickly, with no noticeable shutter lag at all. There's also a 'High Speed' shooting mode which speeds up the auto focus at expense of battery life. The continuous focus mode is another way to ensure the camera is focused on what you want it to be before you take the picture.

Ergonomics

The layout and feel of the camera is generally good. It's shape lends itself well to being held. The textured rubber grip areas are comfy and inspire confidence when holding the camera. The controls are all easily accessible and the main navigation is done via a circular 4-way control button, with a central 'OK' button. Most of the controls can be reached with the right hand. The focus control, which toggles between Continuous, Single and Manual modes (as well as a button to auto-focus on demand when in manual mode), is mounted on the left of the lens which seems to be a logical place for it and can easily be operated with the left hand.

A few of the features are only available with a 2-button combination. This took me a bit by surprise. I'm not one for reading manuals, and was stumped until I did so, when trying to work out how to adjust the aperture in Manual exposure mode. The shutter speed can be adjusted with the up and down navigation buttons but to adjust the aperture you have to first hold down the 'AE preset' button with your index finger and then use the up and down controls. Not particularly logical or intuitive for a first time user but quite functional once you know how to do it.

In manual focus mode you adjust the focus with a pseudo focus ring around the lens. This is a simple way of doing it and it works well. A pleasing feature of the manual focus mode is that there are on-screen guides which indicate which way to turn the ring to get the centre of the image in focus. It's interesting to note here that you have to press the 'once off' auto focus button to get these to function; they only work once they have turned yellow.

Sample Images

The images below are 100% crops of the whole image, click on the thumbnails to see the complete image. The picture were taken at 'Standard' sharpness and 6M Standard compression. Selecting 6M Fine compression does result in slightly better image quality.

Chromatic Aberrations

As you can see in the two examples below the Chromatic Aberrations only seem to be a problem when the areas of contrast are exposed. In the second example the bright area is over-exposed which seems to not show the fringing.

Chromatic Aberrations at their worst.
Example of Chromatic Aberrations at their worst

Chromatic Aberrations at their best.
Example of Chromatic Aberrations at their best

General Clarity test.
Clarity Test

One thing that does seem to be apparent at close inspection are 'artifacts' in dark areas. You can see this in the dark areas of the swan images above. However, in practice these artifacts are only really visible on-screen at 100%. When they are printed and when viewed in iPhoto the artifacts are barely visible.

Buy from Amazon.co.uk:
Fuji FinePix S6500 Digital Camera (6.3MP, 10.7x optical zoom) 2.5" LCD

About the author

Ben Vallack is Creative Director at Phototropic Productions. His many roles include web design, photography, camera operating and editing.

Comments

  1. This was the most useful review of the s6500fd i have read to date. I Googled around and read about 10-15 reviews, and the majority was jusr the rewrite of the marketing materials found on the Fuji site. Thanx, i'l order the camera next week.

    Written on Thursday, November 9, 2006 at 7:19hrs by Hrvoje

  2. Thank you so much, I've had a list of possible cameras to buy and looking them up, your comprehensive yet amateur-readable review has convinced me to buy the s6500fd. Thank you for your help. *

    Written on Saturday, December 30, 2006 at 14:36hrs by *

  3. I don't have one yet but I'm deciding between 6500fd and the 9600, I'm not so sure that the 9600 is worth paying more for because I'm not a hardcore photographer, I just like taking pictures, but I think you're right about the face detection - it hasn't sold the 6500fd to me but it sounds really useful though (technically) it would make the camera "slower" when you're NOT taking people pictures...because it's looking for people, isn't it? Anyway, very useful review.

    Written on Tuesday, February 6, 2007 at 8:01hrs by James

  4. Yeah that was a worry of mine, and although I do keep it off when I'm not using it, I can't really notice a slow down. I've been taking quite a few pics with it recently and really getting on well with it. Highly recommended. :)

    Written on Tuesday, February 6, 2007 at 14:04hrs by the author

  5. Thanks for the informative and easy to read review. I am no camera expert and your review helped me make up my mind to purchase the S6500fd. I'm looking forward to getting to grips with it!

    Written on Thursday, March 15, 2007 at 4:55hrs by Gary

  6. Bought it.. Great camera, I just feel sorry for all those people who have spent three times the price for an SLR that produces no better results!

    Written on Monday, June 4, 2007 at 12:51hrs by RTFishall

  7. It was a cool review. I will buy this machine after I ve sold my s5600. ThanX

    Written on Sunday, August 5, 2007 at 14:29hrs by Baxee

  8. Excellent user friendle review. will get one next week. Thank you mate

    Written on Wednesday, October 31, 2007 at 9:30hrs by Alex Sackey

  9. Honest review. I had already bought one of these camera's for my wife a few months ago. This camera is probably one of the best on the market for the money. So its only 6 million pixels, some of the pictures my wife has managed to take with this camera have been outstanding. My 13 year old son has been on for months he wants a better camera, so we have just bought one for him for Christmas. This camera is an excellent introduction to serious photography without all the hassel

    Written on Sunday, December 2, 2007 at 0:49hrs by A Wilkins

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