But
let's not lose sight of the fact that the F31fd blows away all its competitors
at anything over ISO 200, which is no mean feat….
There
have been changes over the F30; the new processor's noise reduction has been
tweaked slightly to preserve a little more detail, meaning that all ISO
settings are slightly noisier than the F30; ISO 1600 and 3200 visibly so. The
default contrast and sharpening also appear to have been turned down a notch
(more like half a notch really). Whether any of this is good news or not is
more a matter of taste than anything, but for the more serious user (especially
those who like to post-process) even the slightest toning down of in-camera
processing is welcome.
And
so, to sum up; the F31fd is everything the F30 was, with a couple of tweaks
here and there that - on balance - can be considered to offer a slight
improvement over what was already a uniquely capable camera. I suspect (though
I hope I'm wrong) that this is the last time we'll see this sensor in a compact
camera, as Fuji feels the pressure to keep up with the megapixel
race ever more strongly. This would be a real tragedy; the F31fd hits the image
quality 'sweet spot' by using a large sensor, relatively low pixel count and
some very clever processing, and I can't see them repeating this with a more
densely-packed sensor. It is the perfect illustration of the oft made point
that more pixels do not mean better quality; we've compared the F31fd to a
whole range of much more expensive compacts going right up to 10MP, and - aside
from a little extra resolution at base ISO - it puts most of them to shame.
Once you get to ISO 400 there simply isn't a compact on the market that can
hold a flame to it.
At
this moment in time - this unassuming little 6MP camera still sets the
benchmark for image quality in the entire compact sector. It's also a
surprisingly reliable 'point and shoot' model with excellent color and accurate
focus/metering in most circumstances.