Olympus FE-180

Average User Rating

11 reviews

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CNET Editors' Review

The good: Great white balance; comes with batteries and charger.

The bad: Softens details; awkward tripod mount; no manual controls.

The bottom line: This inexpensive shooter won't wow you with features, but its price and pictures are nice.

Review: Lack of control isn't necessarily a bad thing in cameras. If the camera does its job well, the automatic mode should be all you need to take a good snapshot. Unfortunately, cameras tend not to do their jobs well without user tweaks. Thankfully, Olympus's 6-megapixel FE-180 is a rare example of a camera with a well-built automatic system.

The FE-180's small, curved plastic body is a microcosm of the camera itself; comfortable and simple, but unimpressive and not intimidating. The right half of the camera is fatter than the left half to make room for two included ... Expand full review

Lack of control isn't necessarily a bad thing in cameras. If the camera does its job well, the automatic mode should be all you need to take a good snapshot. Unfortunately, cameras tend not to do their jobs well without user tweaks. Thankfully, Olympus's 6-megapixel FE-180 is a rare example of a camera with a well-built automatic system.

The FE-180's small, curved plastic body is a microcosm of the camera itself; comfortable and simple, but unimpressive and not intimidating. The right half of the camera is fatter than the left half to make room for two included rechargeable AA batteries. The batteries come with a separate charger and even come precharged so that you can start shooting as soon as you take the camera out of the box.

The FE-180 has almost no manual controls. Besides macro, flash, and EV compensation, the only way to change the camera's settings is through its various scene presets. It automatically controls aperture, shutter, focus, and even ISO and white balance. Basically, the camera runs almost completely on autopilot.

The FE-180 automatically sets its sensitivity from ISO 64 to ISO 1,000. Unfortunately, you can't change ISO manually, and since the ISO isn't recorded in the EXIF data, there's no way of knowing what ISO setting the camera is using. It features a digital image stabilization mode to help reduce blur, but it still isn't very good for low-light shooting, especially if you can't use the flash. Unfortunately, tripod use is extremely awkward, with the camera's tripod mount on the very far left edge of the body.

The FE-180's automatic white balance was generally very accurate. We noticed some slight yellowing in other lab tests, but our basic scene produced an impressively neutral image. Shots tended to be slightly warm under tungsten lights, but far more neutral and balanced than many cameras. The camera's 38mm-to-114mm (35mm equivalent) zoom lens produced mild distortion at the far wide and telephoto positions but didn't really hurt the pictures. The camera's biggest weakness is a marked softening of details. While the FE-180 handles color and exposure beautifully, it doesn't do a very good job at reproducing fine details such as text.

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Average User Rating

3.0 stars out of 11 user reviews

Rating Breakdown

  • 5 star: 4
  • 4 star: 3
  • 3 star: 0
  • 2 star: 1
  • 1 star: 3

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Most Helpful User Review

4.0 stars 5 of 5 users found this review helpful

"Awesome Camera for Cheap Price" By mafranklin

Pros Very reasonable price, longer battery life, Fun to Use

Cons complicated features

Summary I bought this camera at the famous Fry's electronic, based on a recommendation by a salesperson for 149.99. I was going to buy Canon PowerShot but he pointed out that it has longer battery life and better package value. I bought the whole package for only 226 dollars ... Expand full review

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