Difference between revisions of "Canon Sure Shot Z115/Prima Super 115/Autoboy S (Super)"
m (updated canon camera museum link) |
(added prima photo) |
||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
The 3x zoom lens has a rather feeble f/8.5 maximum aperture at its 115mm telephoto setting; and the programmed exposure scene-mode dial would look right at home on a digital point & shoot from a decade later. | The 3x zoom lens has a rather feeble f/8.5 maximum aperture at its 115mm telephoto setting; and the programmed exposure scene-mode dial would look right at home on a digital point & shoot from a decade later. | ||
+ | {{Flickr_image | ||
+ | |image_source= http://www.flickr.com/photos/vagn49/24425989677/in/pool-camerawiki/ | ||
+ | |image= http://farm5.staticflickr.com/4736/24425989677_76e57c9b5b.jpg | ||
+ | |image_align= | ||
+ | |image_text= Prima Super 115 Caption | ||
+ | |image_by= Vagn Sloth-Madsen | ||
+ | |image_rights= wp | ||
+ | }} | ||
==Links== | ==Links== |
Revision as of 00:36, 21 March 2018
Sure Shot Z115 image by Mike Novak (Image rights) |
This was a 1993 compact 35mm model offered by Canon, under different branding for different markets (in order: the Americas, globally, and within Japan). It was part of a long series of consumer point & shoots from Canon. A newer revision of the camera was introduced in 1999 as the Canon Sure Shot Z115 Panorama (Caption)/Prima Super 115N (Caption)/Autoboy S XL.
The 3x zoom lens has a rather feeble f/8.5 maximum aperture at its 115mm telephoto setting; and the programmed exposure scene-mode dial would look right at home on a digital point & shoot from a decade later.
Prima Super 115 Caption image by Vagn Sloth-Madsen (Image rights) |
Links
- Sure Shot Z115/Prima Super 115/Autoboy S (Super) at the official Canon Camera Museum.