Design
 
As you can see Sony really broke the mould with the F505. Split
into two distinctive sections, the lens barrel and camera "back" (for
want of a better word).
The Lens
The lens barrel is the weight and major structure
of the camera, it's easily twice the weight of the back, containing
a 5x zoom (7.1mm - 35.5mm) lens system by Carl Zeiss, the 1/2"
2.11 megapixel HAD CCD, pop-up flash and mounting various "at
hand" controls. The lens has a fly-by-wire focus ring on the front
with a 52mm filter thread. On the base (located dead center) of
the lens barrel is a metal tripod mount surrounded by a thick
metal mounting plate.. very reassuring.
The Back
The
back of the camera is attached to the lens on its left extreme
by a very strong and stiff 140 degrees swivel, the swivel itself
locks at dead center and has an upper rotation limit of +90 degrees
and a lower rotation limit of -50 degrees. The back contains the
electronic guts of the camera, the LCD, controls, connectors,
battery and MemoryStick slot. The back is light yet sturdy, that
said you really do find yourself supporting the camera in your
left hand gripping the lens barrel.
Overall the camera is oddly ergonomical, when you
first see it you think "Interesting, but how am I going to hold
it?" but after your first three or four shots it feels very natural
and just rests firmly in your left hand with your right hand on
the controls. Typically I was shooting with the screen tilted
upwards about 30 degrees, outside I'd increase that tilt to about
60 degrees to get the best reflectivity out of the superb Hybrid
(reflective and optionally back-lit) LCD.
Design Elements
What no viewfinder? I'm
going to stir things up a little now, with this Sony you just
don't need one. There, I said it... Now, I couldn't have said
that on (say) the Nikon Coolpix 950 or other cameras with lesser
LCD's, but the new Hybrid LCD on the F505 is simply superb, the
first time using it with the backlight off outside in very bright
Singapore sunlight and I could see every detail on the screen,
brighter and clearer than even indoors with the backlight on..
Truly a step in the right direction, I was totally at home using
this camera without holding it up to my eye...
Tripod Mount
 
Yep, it's on the lens barrel, and yes it's dead
center to the lens axis and by the looks of its positioning directly
below the CCD which means it's just perfectly positioned for shooting
panoramas... It's also positioned perfectly from a weight balance,
LCD positioning (you can rotate the LCD upward without having
to rotate the tripod head (at last I can use the spirit level
on my tripod head!) and firmness of hold on the lens. Oh, and
yes, you can change batteries and MemoryStick while it's mounted
on the tripod!
|
Swivel The swivel
is implemented differently on the F505 than on other
cameras, it's a thinner mount around to the lens barrel,
this means that one edge of the barrel rests on a
plastic runner (which makes for extra support) on
the rounded front of the camera back (confused yet?)..
Anyway, this all adds up to a light, well shaped yet
strong construction that feels as though it'll last.
|
 |
Below is a shot of the F505 next to a Nikon Coolpix
950. Here you can see the VAST difference in the size of the lens,
and zoom.

Interestingly, loaded with batteries and flash memory
they both weigh in at 480g (16.9 oz). This demonstrates the trouble
Sony have gone to to make the rear "back" as light as
possible to balance the weight of the lens. The F505 is a comfortably
weighted camera.
LCD Display
It's worth noting that the F505 only has one LCD
display, that is to say there's no "top LCD" displaying
camera settings, all the settings are displayed on the main LCD
on the back of the camera. This makes the camera more compact
but increases the reliance on the main LCD.
|
Luckily Sony have an excellent new 2" Hybrid LCD
which works well backlit (indoors or in the shade)
and in bright sunlight (trust me, sunlight is BRIGHT
here in Singapore) with the backlight turned off.
The LCD has a reflective surface below it which means
that with the backlight off the reflected liight produces
a very bright, vibrant and easy to see LCD. I personally
found the LCD viewed best from about 30 degrees below
perpendicular when used in it's reflective manner.
This is different than the Hybrid LCD seen on (say)
the FD-88 which uses a top mounted sunlight window.
All in all the LCD on this Sony is the BEST I've seen
so far.
|
 |
| |
|
|
This is an example of the normal information overlay
(without menu bar) when shooting. Information displayed
from left to right:
Battery minutes remaining, resollution and JPEG quality,
shots taken on MemoryStick and "remaining space
bar". Macro / program mode, flash mode, current
zoom (only active during and a few seconds after zooming).
Note, there's no "live readout" of the current
exposure, something a few shutterbugs may miss.
|

(Arghhh, no.. not those teletubbies!)
|
|