Model: | Kodak DC215 |
Sensor: | CCD |
Res: | 1 megapixel (1152 x 864 image resolution) |
Lens: | 29 to 58 mm (equivalent to 35mm camera), 4.4 to 8.8 mm (actual), 2x Optical Zoom and Macro mode[1] |
Shutterrange: | 1/2s - 1/362s |
Mmode: | Center-weighted average |
Farea: | 3 presets: 0.2m (Macro), 0.5m to infinity (Wide), 1.0m to infinity (Telephoto) |
Viewfinder: | Optical, LCD |
Speedrange: | 140 (-2.0 to 2.0 EV in 0.5 EV steps) |
Flash: | Internal. Wide : 1.6to TelePhoto : 3.2to. Auto, Fill-In, Off |
Wb: | Auto + 3 presets |
Rearlcd: | 1.8" TFT |
Storage: | CompactFlash I |
Battery: | Four AA battery |
Dimensions: | 115 x 43.3 x 67.5 mm, 4.5 x 1.7 x 2.7 inch |
Weight: | 10.6oz without batteries |
Madein: | Japan |
The Kodak DC215 is a discontinued model of digital camera produced in Japan by the Eastman Kodak Company. This model does not have internal memory (only CompactFlash I cards), but a 4MB card is supplied with the camera. The camera has a 1-megapixel sensor, a fixed focus lens with 2x optical zoom (F/4 wide, F/4.8 telephoto) and macro-setting and a built-in flash. The viewfinder is optical, but it is possible to use the 1.8" rear LCD monitor as viewfinder ("Preview mode"),[2] though Kodak did not recommend that due to high battery consumption. There was also a small LCD black and white screen on the top of the camera to show camera settings only.[3] The DC215 also came in a "Millennium Edition" version which had a gold rather than silver case and came with some additional accessories.[4] [5]
The Kodak DC215 had a notorious problem with its battery compartment. This compartment, which takes in 4 AA batteries, was made of plastic and broke easily. Consumers often resorted to makeshift solutions like the use of rubber bands or duct tape to keep batteries in the camera.