
Kodak DC4800 Specifications

| Street Price |
US$ 750 - 800 |
| Max resolution |
2160 x 1440 |
| Low resolution |
1800 x 1200
1536 x 1024
1080 x 750 |
| Image ratio w:h |
3:2 |
CCD pixels |
3.34 megapixels (3.14 effective)
|
CCD size ** |
1/1.8" (0.556") |
ISO rating |
Auto, 100, 200, 400 |
Zoom wide (W) |
28 mm |
Zoom tele (T) |
84 mm (3 x) |
Digital zoom |
Yes, 2 x |
| Lens |
F2.8 - F4.5 |
| Lens
thread |
Requires optional adapter |
| Auto Focus |
TTL |
Manual Focus |
No |
| Normal focus range |
50 cm - Infinity |
| Macro focus range |
20 cm - 70 cm |
| White balance override |
Auto, four presets, colour temperature
selection (2500 - 10000 K), manual by 4-way controller |
Min shutter |
16 - 0.7 sec (long exp), 1/8 sec
auto, 1/2 sec manual |
Max shutter |
1/1000 sec |
| Flash |
Pop-up |
| Flash range |
W: 3.2 m
T: 2.0 m |
| External Flash |
PC Sync connector |
| Flash modes |
Auto, Anti Red-eye, Forced On, Forced
Off, External |
| Sharpness modes |
Soft, Standard, Sharp |
Metering |
Multi-Pattern, Center-weighted, Spot
|
Aperture priority |
W: F2.8, F5.6, F8.0
T: F4.5, F9.0, F13.0 |
Shutter priority |
No |
Full manual |
Yes |
| AE Lock |
Yes |
Exposure adjustment |
-2 EV to +2 EV in 1/2 EV steps |
| Continuous shooting |
Yes, 3.2 fps @ 2160 x 1440 |
| Tripod mount |
Yes |
| Self-timer |
Yes, 10s delay |
| Video out |
Yes, switchable NTSC / PAL |
| Storage types |
Compact Flash Type I |
| Storage included |
16 MB Compact Flash Type I card |
| Uncompressed format |
Yes, TIFF (9 MB) |
| Compressed format |
JPEG (EXIF) |
| Quality Levels |
TIFF, JPEG: Two qualities @ 2160
x 1440, One at the rest |
| Viewfinder |
Yes, optical (with dioptre correction) |
| LCD |
1.8" TFT |
| Playback zoom |
Yes, 2.0x or 4.0x |
| Operating system |
Proprietary |
| Video Out |
Selectable NTSC or PAL |
| Connectivity |
USB, RS232C (optional cable) |
Battery |
Yes, supplied Kodak Li-Ion rechargeable
|
Battery charger |
Yes, supplied AC adapter / charger
|
| Weight (exc. batteries) |
320 g |
| Dimensions |
120 x 69 x 65 mm (4.7 x 2.7 x 2.5") |
-
click for pop-up help
| ** |
What that means is that if it were a vidicon tube
it would be 0.556 inches in diameter.
This measuring system is a leftover from the days
of video TUBES and has nothing to do with the surface area of the
chip in a direct sense. The Edmund Scientific Optics catalog has
a sidebar that completely backs up the idea.
For instance, a "one inch" chip has a 16mm diagonal
sensor array. A "one half inch" chip has an array of only 8mm in
the diagonal. This means that the 1/1.8 = 0.555 inch measurement
means NOTHING about the sensor array size. Unless they have changed
the entire measurement system just for this chip, the actual sensor
patch is 11% larger than the 8mm of a 1/2 chip or 8.88mm in diagonal.
(Mark Schubin of Videography Magazine)
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