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Casio Exilim Pro EX-F1

*Est. $1,000

Reviewed June 2009
Casio Exilim Pro EX-F1

Best ultra-zoom camera for fast action

pros
  • Ultra-fast shutter
  • Prerecord and motion-activated modes
  • Advanced movie modes
cons
  • Image quality not the best
  • Steep learning curve
  • Expensive
 
 
Where to Buy
 
 
 
5 star:
(3)
4 star:
(0)
3 star:
(0)
2 star:
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1 star:
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Average Customer Review

(3 customer reviews)

for $998.50

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Interesting Camera, July 29, 2009

I have a Canon Digital Rebel XTI, which is far more superior to any nikon on the market. Purchasing the Exilim, I wasn't looking for a camera to take photos with since nothing can beat the Canon Digital Rebel XTI already in my posession. I purchases the Exilim for it's ability to record high speed movies for slow motion playback. Thus far I'm impressed. It is astonishing to watch simple, every day things in slow motion. I do have an old nikon camera that is completely useless due to the fact it is a nikon. I should record myself smashing it with a hammer in high speed, so that I may post it online to show what it looks like when a substandard camera is broken in slow motion. Every detail of the epic wonder will be captured in stunning detail. I can then record HD video of my personal feelings on the matter afterward. I will have no remorse, I promise. With all of that said, the photo quality is pretty good, and the camera takes fast pictures. No lag time recording to the flash card at all. It's also amazing to take 60 photos in 1 second. Astonishing. The abilities of this camera far outweigh those of ANY nikon on the market. It's absolutely astonishing. If I had the choice between a nikon with $10 Million and a Casio, I would choose the nikon, purchase another Casio, and record myself smashing nikon cameras all day, every day, for a month solid with the higher quality Casio.

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Amazing camera, July 8, 2009

I find this camera to be extremely good for a consumer type camera. If you don't need super high resolution, this camera is very adequate. The 12X optical zoom and large lens just blow away most digital cameras. The slow motion (high speed) video is very good at 300fps. At the higher speeds (600 and 1200fps), it does take a lot of light to get good results and the resolution is OK, but not great. However, I have found that most outdoor sporting / action type activities are very well suited to 300fps slow motion video.

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Very techno geek camera, February 12, 2009

It comes with a 150 page manual. In readable (mostly) English. A zillion options. One very nice feature, you can program it to remember most settings. If you want the flash to stay off (which I need most of the time) you can set it to do that, even if you turn it off and on. It seems to have good sensitivity, the image stabilizer works quite well. As a still camera, about average. As a video camera, a lot for the money. It shoots normal video, HD (1080p, 60 Hz) and fast video, up to 1200 fps. Low resolution above 300 fps, good for things that go bump, not for fancy presentations. The 30-300 fps adjustable setting is not so convenient, you have to set the frame rate each time you shoot. It should be programmable. The 300 fps fixed setting has a resolution of about 512x390, good enough for most sports work. A comment on pixels. The Ex-F1 has a 6 Mp sensor. You can get a lot more than that for less money, but it's more marketing than real. You have to look at the sensor (CCD/CMOS) size. Real world lenses are limited to about 100 line pairs per mm in what they can resolve. Based on the specs for the Ex, it tries to get 200 lp/mm. So, not real. My little Olympus P&S is over 400 lp/mm. You just can't get there. Fewer pixels for a given chip size usually means better light sensitivy. That helps more than anything else. For my use, mostly in sports, a very good compromise. The CS prerecord mode is very good. You can get 60 full resolution frames before you press the shutter. It stores them in internal memory and saves after you press the shutter. So you can see what happened just before (up to 60 fps, programmable) With a 16Gbyte SD card, about $25, you can save over 4500 full resolution pictures.

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Where To Buy

Our Sources

1. StevesDigicams.com

The Casio Exilim Pro EX-F1 is considered unique among ultra-zoom cameras because of its ability to record video at 1,200 frames per second and replay in slow motion. Steves-Digicams.com concludes that the EX-F1 is a bit overpriced, but worth it if you shoot a lot of sports and action photos.

Review: Casio Exilim Pro EX-F1, Editors of Steves-Digicams.com, Sept. 25, 2008

2. Pocket-Lint.co.uk

Pocket-Lint gives the Casio Exilim EX-F1 a score of six out of 10, with average image quality being the biggest drawback. Reviewer Stuart Miles writes, "Unless you are in to recording your golf swing or are heading out on safari every month, we struggle to see why you would want it."

Review: Casio Exilim EX-F1 Digital Camera: Slow Motion or One for the Fast Lane?, Stuart Miles, Oct. 28, 2008

3. TrustedReviews.com

Cliff Smith says the Casio Exilim EX-F1's unique abilities will be extremely useful for some, while the lackluster image quality and an "alarmingly high price" will discourage others.

Review: Casio Exilim EX-F1 Review, Cliff Smith, June 3, 2008

4. Laptop Magazine

In this detailed review, the Casio Exilim EX-F1 earns an Editors' Choice award. However, Dana Wollman also notes its drawbacks, among them slow boot-up and shot recovery times. As Wollman sums up, "It's impressive -- often addictive -- but it's not for everyone."

Review: Casio Exilim EX-F1, Dana Wollman, May 28, 2008

5. The New York Times

This standalone review shows what the "astonishing" Casio Exilim Pro EX-F1 does right and what it does wrong. David Pogue is clearly mesmerized by the Casio Exilim Pro EX-F1, but he cautions that it has "nearly as many downsides as breakthroughs."

Review: A Camera for the Shot You Missed, David Pogue, April 3, 2008

6. Amazon.com

Amazon.com has just a handful of owner reviews for the Casio Exilim Pro EX-F1. While ratings are high, users concur with experts about the trade-off between special advanced features and compromised image quality.

Review: Casio Exilim Pro EX-F1 Digital Camera, Contributors to Amazon.com, As of June 2009

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