Solution
IMPORTANT
- The instructions in this section apply to a camera with the [Shooting Mode] set to [AUTO].
When distant subjects are too far away to enlarge using the optical zoom, follow the instructions below.
1. Press the [MENU] button, select the [
] tab and set [Digital Zoom] to [On].
2. Move the zoom lever toward [
] and hold it until zooming stops.
- Zooming stops at the largest possible zoom factor (before the image becomes noticeably grainy), which is then indicated on the screen.
3. Move the zoom lever toward [
] again.
- The camera zooms in even closer on the subject.
-
is the current zoom factor.
IMPORTANT
- Moving the zoom lever will display the zoom bar, which indicates the zoom position. The color of the zoom bar will change depending on the zoom range.
--White range: optical zoom range where the image will not appear grainy.
--Yellow range: digital zoom range where the image is not noticeably grainy (ZoomPlus).
--Blue range: digital zoom range where the image will appear grainy.
Also, because the blue range will not be available at some resolution settings, you can zoom in to the maximum zoom factor.
NOTE
- The focal length that combines the optical zoom and the digital zoom is 24 - 4800 mm (35 mm film equivalent). (The focal length for the optical zoom is 24 - 1200 mm.)
- To deactivate digital zoom, choose [MENU] > [Shooting] tab ( ) > [Digital Zoom] > [Off].
Depending on the resolution settings and the digital zoom factor, the [Zoom Bar] will be displayed in yellow [
] (ZoomPlus).
- In order to avoid image deterioration when shooting with [Digital Zoom], shoot within the range of ZoomPlus.
With the digital tele-converter, the focal length of the lens can be increased by approximately 1.6x or 2.0x. This can reduce camera shake because the shutter speed is faster than it would be if you zoomed in (including using digital zoom) to the same zoom factor.
Shooting Mode with a Digital Tele-Converter Limit