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Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ5 (Black)

Manufacturer: Panasonic   Part number: DMC-TZ5K
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CNET Editors' rating: 7.4 out of 10
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CNET Editors' review - Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ5 (Black)
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Very good

7.4

out of 10
CNET Editor's rating: 7.4 out of 10
Reviewed by Lori Grunin
Review date: 06/23/08
Release date: 02/01/08

The good: Attractive, functional design; generally above-average photo quality for its class; nice, useful feature set; lens can zoom during movie capture.

The bad: Aggressive smoothing reduces detail in indoor shots, even at low ISO sensitivities; modest performance; poorly placed microphone.

The bottom line: Though it's not perfect, the Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ5's compact midrange megazoom feature set puts it in a class with just its sibling, the TZ4, and should deliver a satisfying shooting experience.

Many might find the attractions of the 9-megapixel Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ5 irresistible: it's compact enough to fit in a jacket pocket, yet packs a 10x zoom lens, complete with 28mm-equivalent wide-angle view and optical image stabilizer. It also has a 3-inch LCD and some very interesting shooting features.

Extremely similar to its less-expensive sibling, the DMC-TZ4, the TZ5 offers higher 9-megapixel resolution (compared with 8 megapixels for the TZ4), a 1,270x720-pixel resolution movie-capture mode and a larger LCD (2.5 inches for the TZ4). Because of the higher resolution, the TZ5's performance is also rated a bit slower, with fewer photos fitting in its memory buffer, than the TZ4. Finally, it's about 0.01 inch fatter and at 8.4 ounces, 2 ounces heavier.


Because it lacks manual and semimanual exposure capabilities, the mode dial is fairly sparse. The Easy Zoom button makes a nice shortcut for getting from one end of the zoom range to the other.

A dial lets you switch among camera and movie modes, as well as two slots for program exposure (scene) modes--these have the same choices, but allow the camera to remember two of your last selections--Intelligent Auto and an odd Clipboard mode that captures low-resolution photos to internal memory for fast display.


The four-navigation buttons toggle among the exposure compensation, flash, macro, and self-timer options. Depending upon your current zoom, it automatically chooses standard or telemacro.

One of my few complaints about the design of the TZ5 is the placement of the microphone on the top left of the camera. Given that Panasonic states "do not block the microphone with fingers" five times in the manual, the company must be aware that there's a problem with its location. And despite the many warnings, my fingers still tend to wander over there while recording movies.

The Q(uick) menu button brings up a subset of options that are also available in the full menus: LCD brightness, picture size, aspect ratio, intelligent exposure, ISO sensitivity, white balance, AF mode--spot, face detect, 9-area, 3-area high speed, 1-area high speed, and 1-area--burst shooting and optical stabilization. The full menu adds more shooting settings--picture quality, Intelligent ISO, metering, continuous AF, intelligent exposure, color effects, digital zoom, minimum shutter speed, audio recording, AF assist, and clock set--as well as setup screens.

Several of the TZ5's options are quite useful. I especially like the minimum shutter speed setting; you can set it as slow as 1 second or as fast as 1/200, and though it doesn't prevent the camera from shooting when exposure drops below the threshold, it does blink a warning message. Intelligent ISO lets you set a maximum for the auto of ISO 400, ISO 800, or ISO 1600.

The various AF area-mode selections are pretty practical as well, though more for limiting the range of subjects the AF system chooses to focus on than for speed. For instance, the 9-area AF will frequently choose incorrect subjects, where the 3-area AF, which limits the focus areas to the middle row of the frame, will probably choose correctly more often (since most people simply point at their subject, which puts it in the middle of the frame). On one hand, the TZ5's face detection seems more robust and faster than other implementations I've seen; on the other, it still doesn't seem to be more efficient or easier than using center-spot focusing and recomposing.

Performance turns out to be this camera's Achilles' heel. By the numbers, it's just a tad slow--nothing egregious, but overall more sluggish than its competitors, and about the same as the TZ3. In CNET Labs' performance tests, it took about 2.4 seconds for the TZ5 to wake up and shoot. Time to focus and snap under optimal conditions ran about 0.7 second, while that ran 1 second in lower-contrast circumstances. It required 2.1 seconds to shoot 2 sequential shots, which bumped to 2.5 seconds with the flash enabled. The TZ5 has two burst-shooting modes, a standard and Free; the latter adjusts white balance and exposure between shots. The standard, faster mode is fixed to a 3-shot maximum at highest quality, and tested out at 2 frames per second. We didn't test Free, which can shoot until the card fills, because it's slow enough that the buffer never becomes the bottleneck. The battery is CIPA rated at about 300 photos, a quite reasonable figure for its class.

The TZ5's large LCD remains viewable in bright sunlight, and Panasonic has a specific setting that improves viewing when holding the camera off-angle, above your head. However, in addition to modest test performance, I frequently found the TZ5's autofocus behavior slowing me down. With point-and-shoot models I try to prefocus as frequently as possible, since that speeds up shooting. For whatever reason, either a twitchy forefinger or odd shutter behavior, the TZ5 often insisted on refocusing just before shooting even after I'd prefocused. And not just a minor tweak--occasionally it would hunt the entire focus range again. And every now and then it shot without locking focus at all.

Photo samples from the Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ5.

Overall, despite excessive image noise on certain types of photos, the TZ5 produces very pleasing photos with which most shooters will be happy. Even in bright, contrasting light exposures look good, colors appear saturated and relatively accurate, and when it focuses correctly, the TZ5 produces sharp photos that you can print as least as big as 11inches by 14 inches. (For more on photo quality, click through to the slide show.)

In addition, the TZ5 delivers very nice movies--provided you don't put your fingers over the microphone--in both the wide-aspect 1,280x720 and VGA modes. (Connecting directly to an HDTV to view the 16:9 recordings requires an optional, proprietary component video cable.) Plus, unlike many competitors, it can zoom while recording over its entire range. It records QuickTime Motion JPEG movies, with a 2GB maximum on clip size; clips run about 11 minutes per gigabyte for the HD clips and 28 minutes per gigabyte for VGA. Panasonic also recommends a 10MB/sec or faster SD card for movie capture.

Although we've yet to test the TZ4, based on its specifications and my experiences with the TZ5, you may be better off saving the $50 to $100 and sticking with the cheaper model. Still, as far as truly compact megazooms go, these two are pretty much your only options, and the Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ5 acquits itself well.

Shooting speed (in frames per second)
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Time to first shot  
Flash shot-to-shot time  
Typical shot-to-shot time  
Shutter lag (dim)  
Shutter lag (typical)  
Canon PowerShot SX100 IS
2 
4.33 
1.7 
1 
0.5 
Sony Cyber-shot DSC-H10
1.7 
1.82 
1.4 
1.1 
0.5 
Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ3
2.3 
2.41 
1.3 
1.3 
0.6 
Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ5
2.4 
2.52 
2.1 
1 
0.7 

Typical continuous-shooting speed (in frames per second)
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ5
2 

(Originally posted on CNET Reviews)
User opinions - Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ5 (Black)
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Very good

7.0

out of 10
Average user rating from 2 users

Sort 2 user opinions by:

6 out of 10 - Good
TZ3 "dumbed-down" - The TZ5 is A Disapppointment !!!!
With relatively minor improvements, the TZ3 could have been taking to the point of an effective "pocketable" substitute for a ... Read more
by karlviehe (see profile) - April 27, 2008

9 out of 14 users found this user opinion helpful.
7 comments posted to this opinion

9 out of 10 - Spectacular
Great camera all-around, esp. for its size
When I started looking at the market for digital cameras, I had three criteria: Small form, good optical zoom, and ... Read more
by Tokyo_Ben (see profile) - June 11, 2008

1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.

8 out of 10 - Excellent
not a bad camera
Not a bad camera to take on Safari.

Updated at Wed Jun 04 16:39:22 PDT 2008

Don't ...

Updated at Wed Jun 04 16:39:22 PDT 2008

Don't forget to get a case. Read more
by Marc Bennett (see profile) - June 4, 2008





Full specifications - Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ5 (Black)
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Manufacturer: Panasonic
Part number: DMC-TZ5K
General
Product Type Digital camera - Compact
Color Black
Weight 7.5 oz
Width 4.1 in
Depth 1.5 in
Height 2.3 in
Main Features
Resolution 9.1 megapixels
Sensor resolution 9.1 megapixels
Optical Sensor Type CCD
Effective Sensor Resolution 9,100,000 pixels
Total Pixels 10,700,000 pixels
Optical Sensor Size 1/2.33 in
Light Sensitivity ISO 200, ISO 800, ISO auto (1600-6400), ISO auto, ISO 400, ISO 1600, ISO 100
Digital Zoom 4 x
Shooting Modes Frame movie mode
Shooting Programs Baby2, Candle, Starry sky, Night portrait, Self-portrait, Aerial photo, Sports mode, Snow, Soft skin, Pet, Clipboard, Fireworks, High sensitivity, Party/indoor, Sunset, Food, Beach, Portrait mode, Baby1, Hi-speed burst, Underwater, Scenery, Night scene
Special effects Warm, Vivid, Black & White, Sepia, Cool, Neutral
Max Shutter Speed 1/2000 sec
Min Shutter Speed 60 sec
Exposure Metering Multi-segment, Center-weighted, Spot
Exposure Modes Automatic, Program
Exposure Compensation ?2 EV range, in 1/3 EV steps
Auto Exposure Bracketing 3 steps in 1/3 EV step
White Balance Custom, Automatic, Presets
White Balance Presets Shade, Halogen, Cloudy, Daylight
Digital video format QuickTime
Still Image Format JPEG
Continuous Shooting Speed 2.5 frames per second=10 frames per second
Color support Color
Image Stabilizer Optical (MEGA O.I.S.)
Face Detection Yes
TV Tuner None
Video Capture QuickTime - 320 x 240, QuickTime - 1280 x 720, QuickTime - 848 x 480, QuickTime - 640 x 480
Memory / Storage
Flash Memory 27 MB Flash - Integrated
Integrated Memory 27 MB
Floppy Drive None
Image Storage JPEG 3072 x 1728, JPEG 2048 x 1360, JPEG 640 x 480, JPEG 3552 x 2368, JPEG 2560 x 1440, JPEG 3072 x 2304, JPEG 3712 x 2088, JPEG 1920 x 1080, JPEG 1600 x 1200, JPEG 3072 x 2048, JPEG 2048 x 1536, Fine, JPEG 2560 x 1920, Standard JPEG 3456 x 2592, JPEG 2560 x 1712
Flash memory 27 MB - Integrated
Supported Flash Memory MultiMediaCard, SD Memory Card
Lens System
Type Zoom lens - 4.7 mm - 47 mm - F/3.3-4.9
Focal Length 4.7 mm - 47 mm
Lens Construction 9 group(s) / 11 element(s)
Lens Manufacturer Leica
Additional Features
Self Timer Yes
Self Timer Delay 10 sec, 2 sec
Additional Features USB 2.0 compatibility, DPOF support, Face detection, Automatic face tracking technology, Audio recording, PictBridge support, In-camera red-eye removal, RGB primary color filter, Built-in speaker, Resizing an image, Built-in help guide, Digital image rotation, Date/time stamp, Histogram display
Camera Flash
Effective Flash Range 1 ft - 21 ft
Type Built-in flash
Flash Modes Flash OFF mode, Fill-in mode, Slow synchro, Auto mode, Red-eye reduction
Red Eye Reduction Yes
Effective flash range 1 ft - 21 ft
Features AF illuminator
Viewfinder
Viewfinder Type None
Display
Type LCD display - TFT active matrix - 3 in - Color
Mounting Built-in
Resolution 460,000 pixels
Digital Player (Recorder)
Type None
Microphone
Type Microphone - Built-in
Technology Electret condenser
Mode Mono
Connections
Connector Type 1 x DC power input, 1 x Component video output, 1 x Composite video/audio output, 1 x USB
Expansion Slot(s) 1 x SD Memory Card
Lens Systems
Auto Focus TTL contrast detection
Type Zoom lens
Focal length 4.7 mm - 47 mm
Focal Length Equivalent to 35mm Camera 28 - 280 mm
Focus adjustment Automatic
Auto Focus Points (Zones) 9
Min Focus Range 19.7 in
Macro Focus Range 5cm
Lens Aperture F/3.3-4.9
Optical Zoom 10 x
Zoom Adjustment Motorized drive