Ricoh GR-Digital Review

Announced almost a year ago - and rumored for a long time before - the GR Digital was always going to be something of a niche product. Described as a 'professional grade high resolution compact' the GR Digital echoes the design and ethos of the popular and very highly regarded GR series of film compacts and is unusual in having a fixed 28mm equivalent F2.4 lens and full photographic control. The 8MP GR-D (as we'll call it from now on) is also fairly expandable; with an optional optical viewfinder, 21mm equivalent ultra wide converter and dedicated flash available (though by then you've spend well over $1000). Originally released only in Europe and Asia, the GR-D has recently made its way to North America, though you're still unlikely to find it on the shelves of your local camera store. So does the GR-D live up to all the hype or is it just another 8MP compact with pretensions? Let's find out, starting as usual with the headline features:
- Newly Developed GR Lens Provides High Resolution and resolving power
- 8.13 million effective pixels
- High resolution 2.5-inch LCD
- World's first twin-dial control system in a compact
- Magnesium Alloy case
- Optional high performance optical viewfinder
- Optional 21mm equivalent wide converter
- Manual, Program, Program shift AE and Aperture Priority modes
- 1.5 cm macro mode
GR-Digital specifications
| Street price |
US: $699
UK: £380 |
| Body Material |
Magnesium alloy and plastic |
| Sensor |
• 1/1.8" Type CCD
• 8.3 million pixels total
• 8.1 million effective pixels |
| Image sizes |
• 3264 x 2448
• 3264 x 2176
• 2592 x 1944
• 2048 x 1536
• 1280 x 960
• 640 x 480
Text:
• 3264 x 2448
• 2048 x 1536
|
| Movie clips |
• 320 x 240 30fps
• 160 x 120 30fps
|
| File formats |
JPEG (EXIF 2.2)
RAW
• AVI (Motion JPEG) |
| Lens |
28mm equiv.
F2.4
Ricoh GR Lens
6 elements including low dispersion glass and two molded aspherical elements
Seven-bladed aperture diaphragm
|
| Image stabilization |
None |
| Conversion lenses |
21mm equivalent wide converter (Optional) |
| Digital zoom |
up to 4x |
| Focus |
• Auto focus
• Manual focus
• Snap (Hyperfocal)
• Infinity |
| AF area modes |
Multi-point
Spot |
| AF assist lamp |
Yes |
| Focus distance |
Normal: 30cm – infinity
Macro: 1.5cm – infinity |
| Metering |
Multi (256 zone)
Center weighted
Spot |
| ISO sensitivity |
• ISO 64
• ISO 100
• ISO 200
• ISO 400
• ISO 800
• ISO 1600 |
| Exposure compensation |
+/- 2 EV
1/3 EV steps |
| Exposure bracketing |
-0.5 EV, 0, +0.5 EV |
| Shutter speed |
180 - 1/2000 sec |
| Aperture |
F2.4 - 11 (f7.1 - 11 with ND filter)
1/3 EV increments in P, A , M modes |
| Modes |
• Program
• Aperture priority
• Program shift AE |
| Scene modes |
Text |
| White balance |
• Auto
• Daylight
• Overcast
• Tungsten Light
• Fluorescent light
• Manual
• Advanced (Manual fine-tune) |
| White balance fine tune |
150 K step
+/- 1500 K
White balance bracketing
|
| Self timer |
10 / 2 secs |
| Continuous shooting |
Cont (Limited only by size of card)
Multi-shot (16 shots combined into one image) at 8fps |
| Image parameters |
Hard, normal, soft, b/w, two presets |
| Flash |
• Built-in pop-up
• Auto, red-eye suppression, force flash, slow synchro, no flash
• Range: Approx. 0.2 to 3 m (when ISO Auto is set) |
| Viewfinder |
Optional hotshoe-mounted Galilean finder with frame lines for 21/28mm |
| LCD monitor |
• 2.5" TFT LCD
• 210,000 pixels |
| Connectivity |
• USB 2.0
• AV out |
| Print compliance |
PictBridge |
| Storage |
• SD / MMC card
• 26 MB internal memory |
| Power |
• 1x rechargeable D-60 battery or 2x AAA batteries
• Charger optional |
| Weight |
170 g (6 oz) (no card, batteries or strap)
200 g (7.1 oz) (with batteries and strap) |
| Dimensions |
107 x 25 x 58 mm (4.2 x 1 x 2.3 in) |

If you're new to digital photography you may wish to read the Digital
Photography Glossary before diving into this article (it may help
you understand some of the terms used).
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Simon Joinson / dpreview.com and the review in part or in whole may NOT be reproduced in
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