Typical price: £130
What is it: Inexpensive 7-megapixel camera with 4x optical zoom
What we think: Its low price tag and solid performance can help you forget that it doesn't have many bells or whistles
Canon PowerShot A550 Review
Reviewed on: 19 February 2007
Canon's PowerShot A550 is a simple, inexpensive 7-megapixel camera, and that's all it wants to be. While it has some nice features, it doesn't offer any outstanding, unique aspects that put it above any other camera in the field, and that's just fine. Good performance and solid images are all a camera needs to succeed, and the A550 delivers just that.
Design
Though not quite small enough to slip into your jeans, the A550 is still comfortably compact. At 210g and 43mm thick, the camera can fit easily into most jacket pockets and bags. The camera's body has an L-shaped design found on most of Canon's PowerShot A series, giving it a generous grip. The buttons are large and comfortable, and they're laid out logically along the back and the top of the camera.
Features
The A550 is a fairly nondescript camera, with few outstanding or unusual features. Its most notable attribute is its 35mm-to-140mm-equivalent 4x optical zoom lens, which gives it slightly more range than the 3x lenses typical of most budget cameras. It has a smaller-than-usual 51mm (2-inch) LCD screen that is augmented by an optical viewfinder for shooting in dim light. Besides those features, the A550 has the standard handful of scene presets and image adjustment settings, including a 30fps VGA (640x480) movie mode and a pleasantly unexpected 60fps QVGA (320x240) high-speed movie mode. Finally, like most Canon PowerShot A-series cameras, the A550 conveniently takes AA batteries.
Performance
The A550 performed well in almost all of our Labs' tests. After its brisk start-up time of 1.5 seconds, we could snap a shot once every 1.7 seconds, a great improvement over previous cameras in the PowerShot A500 range. Unfortunately, with the onboard flash enabled, that time more than tripled to 4.9 seconds per shot. The camera's shutter was responsive, lagging less than 0.5 seconds with our high-contrast target and a modest 1.2 seconds with our low-contrast target. Burst mode was also pleasantly fast, managing 51 full-resolution shots in 31.4 seconds for a rate of 1.6fps.
Photos looked pretty good, though they're marred by overprocessing and fringing in spots. Colours reproduced well, though indoor photos shot with automatic white balance come out very yellow, a common problem for most point-and-shoot cameras. Noise is low up to ISO 400 sensitivity, where a fine grain starts to appear. Images are predictably noisy at ISO 800 sensitivity, with speckling damaging fine details and softening colours. ISO 800 is usually reserved for low-light and high-speed shooting, and everyday snapshots shouldn't have many problems.
With quick performance and decent photos, the Canon PowerShot A550 is a solid budget camera. It doesn't have many special features and it's not particularly small or light, but it's a strong choice if you don't want to spend a lot for your snapshots.
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
|
|
Typical shot-to-shot time |
|
Time to first shot |
|
Shutter lag (typical) |
Additional editing by Kate Macefield
Tell us what you think
Do you own this product? Want to share your experiences with other CNET UK users?
Write your own review of the Canon PowerShot A550
Can't find the product you're looking for? Want to suggest a product for review?
Special Offers from our Sponsors
Latest Digital camera Reviews
Canon EOS 7D
It's got flaws, but the 7D moves the goalposts so far that competitors will need binoculars
Canon Digital IXUS 200 IS
Ticks numerous boxes, but it's not especially cheap and not particularly exciting
Canon PowerShot S90
The S90 is the enthusiast's dream, offering compactness, great image quality and superb controls
Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX550
Disappointing. The hybrid touchscreen interface is lacklustre overall, and the lens isn't that good
on Digital Cameras
Olympus E-P2: How's the view? Electronic, expensive
Olympus has announced the E-P2, the second retro-styled Micro Four Thirds camera in the Pen range
More:







