Sony F77 Black-Compact Design,Basic Shooting,ENGLISH,Black Digital Cam
INCLUDE:
1*CAMERA
1*BATTERY
1*CHARGER
1* SD CARD
The Commodity will be shipped after u confirmed the real thing pics and Our Tested :))
Sony DSC-F77
A compact digital camera released by Sony in the early 2000s (circa 2002–2003), positioned as a mid-range option for everyday photography, targeting casual users and early digital camera adopters.
Core Specifications
- Sensor: 1/2.7-inch CCD sensor, with approximately 3.34 million total pixels and 3.21 million effective pixels; maximum still image resolution is 2048×1536 pixels, supporting lower resolutions like 1600×1200 and 640×480.
- Lens: Carl Zeiss Vario-Tessar lens, featuring 3x optical zoom (35mm equivalent focal length: 39–117mm); aperture range F2.8–F4.9, with a macro focusing distance of 10cm (wide-angle end) to infinity.
- Display: 1.5-inch TFT LCD screen with 120,000 pixels, used for framing shots and reviewing photos; no tilt or touch functionality (standard for its era).
- Video Shooting: Supports VGA (640×480) video recording at 16fps in MOV format; no audio recording (a common limitation of early 2000s compact cameras).
- Storage & Battery: Uses Memory Stick Duo for storage (no built-in memory); powered by a lithium-ion battery (NP-FC10), offering approx. 120 shots per full charge (per early Sony specs).
Key Features
- Image Processing: Basic digital image enhancement (e.g., white balance presets: Auto, Daylight, Cloudy, Tungsten, Fluorescent) to adapt to different lighting conditions.
- Shooting Modes: Includes Program Auto mode, Scene modes (Portrait, Landscape, Night Scene), and a Self-Timer (10-second delay) for group shots or self-portraits.
- Flash Functions: Built-in flash with modes: Auto, On, Off, and Red-Eye Reduction, suitable for low-light or backlit shooting scenarios.
- Design: Compact plastic body (dimensions approx. 111×60×36mm, weight ~195g with battery), featuring a classic "point-and-shoot" layout with physical buttons for quick setting adjustments.
Limitations (Era-Specific)
- Low resolution by modern standards, unsuitable for large prints or cropping.
- No audio in video recording and low frame rate (16fps) for choppy motion.
- Small LCD with low pixel density, making detail checks during playback difficult.
- Discontinued for decades; replacement batteries and Memory Stick Duo cards are scarce, limiting practical use today.