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Just six months after Ricoh launched its excellent CX1, its successor is already here. The CX1s most impressive specifications are further improved, with a zoom range up from 7.1x to 10.7x and continuous shooting now at a staggering 5fps. Unlike the souped-up continuous modes on some other compact cameras, this one runs at the full resolution and is limited only by the speed of the SDHC card with a Sandisk Extreme III card it slowed to 3.5fps after 28 shots. The 3in, 920,000-pixel screen is unchanged from the CX1. This screen is far sharper than the 230,000- and 460,000-pixel screens in rival cameras and is a delight to use, particularly when adjusting the focus manually. Its disappointing that manual exposure remains absent, though. There are various advanced functions such as bracketing for exposure, white balance and focus, but its hard to imagine anyone who will want these features but not require manual exposure controls. Another frustration is that the Auto ISO mode refused to venture beyond ISO 200, and even Auto-Hi was limited to ISO 400. Users will need to adjust the ISO speed manually to avoid excessively slow shutter speeds in low light. The CX2 uses the same sensor as the CX1, so while noise levels remain excellent for this type of camera, it cant match the front-runner, Fujifilms F70EXR. Meanwhile, the new 10.7x zoom lens failed to match the CX1s 7.1x zoom lens for sharpness. The difference was slight at most focal lengths but quite significant at the telephoto end. The autofocus sometimes failed to lock onto subjects at full zoom, too.
With its extended zoom range, Ricoh is clearly pitching the CX2 in competition with compact big-zoom cameras such as Panasonics TZ range and Fujifilms F70EXR. However, it fails to deliver on these terms. The CX1 was a better camera and fortunately its still available, now costing around £200.