Top 25 Best Buys

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Top 25 Best Buys
Top 25 Best Buys

These digital cameras and lenses give you so much bang for the buck, they're practically explosive.

By Dan Richards Posted August 1, 2007

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Tank Sale: Pentax K10D

 

Who? DSLR types demanding more than "sturdy polycarbonate." What? Pentax K10D. Why? What would you pay for a pro-level DSLR body? $1,200? $1,400? More? Here's what you get in a K10D: a rugged, heavily sealed body with shutter mechanism rated for 100,000 cycles; a high-magnification viewfinder with glass pentaprism; in-camera image editing that allows conversion of edited RAW files into JPEGs; self-cleaning CCD sensor; sensor-based image stabilization that will work with any lens. Image quality from the camera is routinely Excellent, particularly when using RAW mode. Go on, how much? Now!$795, street, body only.

Distance Specs: Sony Cyber-shot DSC-H7

 

Who? Long-zoom enthusiasts. What? Sony Cyber-shot DSC-H7. Why? When we tested the $470 Sony Cyber-shot DSC-H9 (August 2007), we found it outstanding. But give up a little in the way of features, and save a lot (around a hundred bucks). With the H7, Sony subtracts the NightShot mode (of very limited use), and substitutes a 2.5-inch fixed LCD (plenty big) for the H9's 3-inch tilting one. You get the same sensor, processor, superduper 15X optical zoom with image stabilization, and accessories. The clincher is the imaging performance -- the best we've seen so far in a superzoom. Expect DSLR-quality shots through ISO 800. Now!$370, street.

Steady Long Shot: Kodak EasyShare Z712 IS

 

Who? Distance junkies for whom a 3X (or 5X or 10X) zoom just isn't enough. What? Kodak EasyShare Z712 IS. Why? Kodak's latest long-range zoomer gives you about as much for your money as any camera in this class: 36-432mm equivalent f/2.8-4.8 Schneider 12X optical zoom, lens-based image stabilization, fast click-to-capture speed (a claimed 1/4-second), 2.5-inch LCD monitor, eye-level electronic viewfinder, 32MB internal memory backup to the SD card slot, QuickTime MPEG-4 movies with mono sound, and very adept panorama-stitching. When you're finished shooting, set it down on a Kodak Printer Dock and effortlessly pop out 4x6s. Now!$300, street.

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