Canon PowerShot A530 review

Our rating

3.0 stars out of 5

User rating

5 stars out of 5

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Verdict

The Canon PowerShot A530 is a solid budget camera that could do with a shot of adrenaline

Good

  • Robust controls and features
  • Logical design

Bad

  • Lacklustre performance
  • Noisy, high-ISO photos
  • Awkward zoom switch

In this review

Though the Canon PowerShot A530 is a modest 5-megapixel step down from its 6-megapixel sibling, the PowerShot A540, it still has almost all of the same handy features. Unfortunately, it lacks the zippy performance and the large LCD that help elevate the A540 above the crowd.

Design
The PowerShot A530's plastic body feels solid and measures 89 by 64 by 43mm. As on many not-quite-pocketable digital cameras, the AA batteries reside within a comfortable grip on the A530's right side. The camera's 46mm (1.8-inch) LCD is smaller than most -- far smaller than the 64mm (2.5-inch) screen on the A540 -- with a low resolution of just 77,000 pixels.

Fortunately, the tiny LCD leaves enough room for an optical viewfinder and a relatively comfortable button layout. You traverse the easy-to-navigate menu system with the big, circular D-pad. Additional menu, display, print and delete buttons encircle the main pad. A standard mode dial on the top of the camera sets the A530's various shot modes. The zoom works via a jog dial surrounding the shutter release -- it can be a little awkward to operate, but the rest of the layout is fairly well done.

Features
The Canon PowerShot A530 incorporates the same 35mm-to-140mm (35mm equivalent) 4x zoom lens as the A540 -- with the same slow maximum aperture of f/5.5 at the telephoto end. The combination of 1/2,000-second-to-15-second shutter speeds and sensitivity as high as ISO 800 gives you some latitude with low-light shooting, though the results may disappoint you.

In addition to a useful selection of common scene presets, such as low-light, portrait and sports, the A530 includes Canon's Color Swap and Color Accent modes. These allow you to isolate a specific colour in each shot -- the camera can then either change or maintain the colour while converting the rest of the image to monochrome. The A530 can also record VGA movies at 30fps.

Performance
Speed is really the A530's weakness. After a start-up time of 2.1 seconds -- pretty typical for cameras in this class -- and a brisk 0.5-second shutter lag in good light, the lag increases to a full second with the lights turned down. The A530 requires a painful 2.8 seconds between nonflash shots and a full 6 seconds between shots with flash. Even its continuous shooting proved surprisingly slow, averaging about 1.8fps compared to the A540's 2.3fps.

Image quality
Photos fared better, although here too the A530 had a few problems. At low ISO-sensitivity settings, the camera produced very strong images with little noise, accurate colour and exposure, and a low incidence of chromatic aberration. By ISO 400, the noise became quite apparent -- beyond that, photos reached the better-than-nothing stage.

The Canon PowerShot A530 is a decent, inexpensive digital camera that produces very pretty images in well-lit environments, and its various controls and features make it appealing to amateur photographers on a budget. However, if you can stretch your budget just a little farther, the A540 will reward you with better performance and a much better 64mm LCD.
 

Shooting speed
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Typical shot-to-shot time   
Time to first shot   
Shutter lag (typical)   
Panasonic Lumix DMC-LZ3
2.6 
2.9 
1.0 
Fujifilm FinePix V10
2.0 
1.5 
0.5 
Canon PowerShot A530
2.8 
2.1 
0.5 
Note: Seconds


Typical continuous-shooting speed
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Panasonic Lumix DMC-LZ3
2.7 
Canon PowerShot A530
1.8 
Fujifilm FinePix V10
1.1 
Note: Frames per second

Additional editing by Nick Hide

User reviews1

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Mark Godbold's avatar
5 stars out of 5

Mark Godbold 3 December 2006

Good: The whole family can use it. The price. A viewfinder.

Bad: Nothing.

Comment: I've just changed from a cheap digital camera to this canon. The photos are good and everyone has found it easy to use. A viewfinder is a must in sunlight - and this camera has one. I found the best deal on Amazon and at a price of less than £100!

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