Pentax Optio S6 review

Pentax is gaining ground in the good-looking compact stakes

The S6 certainly looks good

TechRadar Verdict

This cute and stylish compact gets many things right, and is certainly fun to hang out with

Pros

  • +

    Looks good and acts fast

Cons

  • -

    Grain and noise issues with enlargements

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We've long been enamoured with the Canon's Ixus range, but the new Optios are equally attractive. Take the S6: from the front it takes the concept of a simple silver rectangular box with a lens totally to heart, with little in the way of unnecessary adornment - and looks all the better for it.

Turn it around and a large LCD screen covering two-thirds of the back panel greets you. This 2.5-inch beauty is one of the major improvements this camera boasts over previous Optio offerings. But the good news goes beyond size, with the backlit anti-glare screen proving itself a real star when it comes to framing and reviewing in a variety of tricky light sources.

Standard features

Elsewhere, features are standard for this type of compact, with Pentax's useful Mode palette - featuring pre-configured setups for shooting a variety of different subjects - coupled with the idiot-proof Green option to make this one very user-friendly snapper.

In use, the Optio S6 is quick and responsive. The Sliding Lens System lens pops the 3x optical zoom out of the 19mm body with the minimum of fuss, and is ready to take the fi rst shot not far beyond the two-second mark. Multiple shots can be taken rapidly in one of several available drive modes, up to 1.6fps.

The shutter release also benefits from a lack of lag, although it's too close to the on/off button. The auto focus system was also quick and good at picking up on the main attraction. The same is true of exposure and white balance, although leaving the automatic setting alone and adjusting it manually gave better results.

In general, the images this camera produced were good, but not great 100 per cent of the time. There's nothing wrong with the way the S6 handles colour or contrast, but troublesome noise and occasionally excessive grain let it down.

As you'd expect, this becomes more of an issue the higher you push the ISO (up to ISO 400 is available) in order to shoot in low-light conditions. While we could accept this, the grain sometimes creeps into even well-lit daylight shots. There's also a degree of chromatic aberration with many of the images, especially in shady conditions, although barrel distortion is kept to a minimum.

The S6 looks great and takes passable photos quickly. This gives it the opportunity to grab a place in the hearts, minds and pockets of that segment of the digital camera boom generation who like nothing more than to snap their mates fooling around on a night out. However, for the more serious user, it lacks that level of sheer quality to totally win us over. Shaun Marin

Via PhotoRadar

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