Home > Consumer Reviews > Panasonic Lumix TZ7 Digital Camera - Black (10.1MP, 12x Optical Zoom) 3.0 inch LCD

Panasonic Lumix TZ7 Digital Camera - Black (10.1MP, 12x Optical Zoom) 3.0 inch LCD

See it at Amazon.co.uk for £228.12

Average Customer Rating
(4.5 out of 5)

Amazon Customer Reviews

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40 of 43 people found the following review helpful:

Great apart from poor battery life

(4 out of 5) by David Levene on May 19, 2009 (London, UK)
Great lens, great images, great menu's. I shoot interiors all day long, and whilst the 3" screen is lovely it DRAINS the battery!!

Panasonic quote average 300 shots, but if those 300 aren't taken consecutively and you spend a few minutes between shots, that big screen drains the battery and I reckon I get about 100 shots from a full charge.

The short battery life makes a mockery of the potential 16gb cards you can buy for this camera!! A spare battery will cost around £70-£80!! So not an economic option for many. I had to buy an in car charger facility and I find myself charging the battery at least 4 times a week.

The battery in my Canon IXUS 970is lasts about 10 times longer on average, and thats using the view screen for every shot. I also believe the Ixus 970is is a better build quality and also smaller.

Notwithstanding the above, this is still a great compact and versatile camera. The wide angle lens is superb.

207 of 231 people found the following review helpful:

Hard to fault, all things considered

(5 out of 5) by A. Butterfield on May 5, 2009 (UK)
To get the best photos, you obviously need an SLR and some great lenses. Hmm. Well, I have an SLR and some great lenses, but I tend to leave them at home when I go on a trip.
So I bought this TZ7 to take with me when I can't be bothered to take my SLR, which is nearly all the time. The TZ7 is small enough to go in a jacket pocket, or to hang unobtrusively from your belt. But is it good enough for anyone used to the quality of an SLR?
For me it is good enough, as long as you adjust your expectations. Which you have to do when you have such a small camera with a 25 to 300 zoom. Try getting a 25 to 300 zoom for an SLR! Even more amazing is that it's a very decently sharp lens. It's a little bit less than razor sharp at the extremes of the zoom range, but almost all my shots came out nice and sharp (but not too sharp, meaning the camera isn't over-processing things).
So the lens is good, and since the lens is the TZ7's party piece, that's a good thing.
Next on the list of killer features is HD video. This is 720p video, not `full' HD, but what do you expect? The great thing is that you can use the optical zoom while taking video, which is rare in these cameras. It zooms slowly so the noise of the zoom isn't picked up by the microphone but works very well. You get stereo sound too, and the quality of the sound is way ahead of any camera like this I've tried before. You might think that you wouldn't get proper stereo with microphones so close together, but it does a decent impersonation of it. Videos look pretty good, with the image stabiliser smoothing things out even at full zoom. Hold it carefully and it looks like you're using a tripod. You will need a decent computer and graphics card to play HD video though, or a compatible HD TV. You may need to buy an HDMI cable since you don't get one in the box.
The next great thing is the LCD. It has 460,000 pixels and looks fantastic. It even brightens and dims automatically depending on the ambient light, and you can see it from any angle, so Panasonic's 'high angle mode' is no longer necessary.
If you know what you're doing you can use the good smattering of `manual' features to good effect. I'm not talking about changing the aperture or shutter speed, but you can adjust exposure compensation, bracketing, white balance, ISO etc. You can set auto ISO to not go higher than 400 or 800, which is useful since things look less than great above ISO400.
If you can't be bothered with all that, set the mode dial to iA (intelligent auto) and leave everything to the camera. It works remarkably well, and you'll see the symbol change in the top corner of the LCD to tell you what scene it thinks you're taking. It even automatically goes into macro mode when set to iA.
But I use mine mostly in standard mode, and I keep the ISO to 80 for the very best results.
One of the best things about the TZ7 is the superb auto exposure system that gets the exposure spot on in an amazing variety of challenging situations that would completely fool my other cameras. Reliable auto-exposure, top-notch image stabilisation, really quick and accurate autofocus, a great LCD... these are the things that give you the confidence to pack the TZ7 as your only camera on a trip.
There must be downsides though... mustn't there? Not many, to be honest, unless you expect the unreasonable, like good performance at ISO1600, or in very low light. The TZ7 doesn't overcome the laws of physics.
But minor niggles for me are that there's a physical switch between record and playback mode, so unlike some cameras, you can't just half-press the shutter to get to record mode if you're in playback mode. Also, I'd prefer to have the metering options in the quick menu, which is otherwise very useful for changing settings. Face recognition I think is little more than a gimmick and one I couldn't get to work reliably. Face detection works very well though.
Actually, there is one other thing, and it's the battery. The TZ7 uses a battery with a Panasonic microchip in it. If you want a spare battery, and you probably will, since battery life is just average (HD video seems to sap battery life quite quickly), you'll have to buy a proper Panasonic one, and they're quite expensive. Third party batteries won't work, at least for now. I nearly knocked off the fifth star because of this.
But the bottom line is that the TZ7 captures sharp, well-exposed images pretty much all the time with the minimum of fuss. I like mine very much indeed.

16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:

Comparison with F200EXR - Hopefully helpful Review

(4 out of 5) by Paul Stebles on Sep 7, 2009 (UK)
As I'm sure a lot of you will have seen the Gadget shows review of the Panasonic Lumix TZ7 vs the Fuji F200EXR.

I just bought my TZ7 2 weeks ago, and a friend at work has the F200EXR, so I thought I'd do a direct comparison shot for shot. I left both camera's in full auto (Intelligent Auto and EXR Auto). After taking a series of identical shots with both I can honestly say the difference is very small. I would say the EXR sensor is superior and produces slightly more natural looking photo, as the F200EXR generally uses its flash far less. But in contrast some shots the Panasonic might overexpose, the Fuji would under expose making a very dark shot. A close call between them it really is, but the Fuji just beats the Panasonic on image quality, but it is minor, probably more pronounced in low light conditions.

If you could marry the sensors from the Fuji and the Panasonic's other features you'd have one brilliant camera.

The tough choice comes with the other features, for the £40 or so extra you pay for the Panasonic, you get 12x zoon, over a 5x and this really does make a big difference on distance shots. Just taking a shot of a horse in a field the other day, I could zoom to having it in full shot, as opposed to a distant figure taking a quarter of the shot.

The other feature, Video, was the biggest easily comparable difference between the two, the Panasonic just walks all over the Fuji. Comparing two video's side by side, take simultaneously, the Fuji is grainy and a far lower resolution and quality, whereas the Panasonic is sharp, high res and superior in every aspect. Plus you can zoom in the video, big bonus, the Fuji was totally unresponsive when trying to zoom mid video.

To answer a lot of concerns about loose dials, battery life etc. I bought mine from Amazon 2 weeks ago in late August 09, it came with the firmware 1.2. They've obviously fixed the dial now, it clicks into position fine, I can see how in the past it may have been easily knocked, but its fine now.

The battery is good for about 300 shots, I'd say that's accurate, I took 80 shots yesterday, 20 today, and a short video and its dropped one third, it was still showing full after the 80 shots. I have bought a spare myself for day trips out with lots of video in mind. It seems better after its been used for a few charges than the first time it was fully charged.

The zoom can be a little sensitive and takes a bit to get used to the fast zoom speed, but its ok.

Why 4 stars, well it would take a lot to get 5 stars, I still find I need to take 2 shots of things to make sure I get the best photo possible, intelligent auto is good, but it overly uses the flash. If it doesn't pick up a scene it can be best to switch to scene mode and choose the correct one for a good shot. The Fuji was slightly better in that respect, detecting the scene correctly. All in all a great camera, highly recommended, but there's room for improvement.

Personally I would stick with my TZ7 over the F200EXR, but it depends on your priorities.

25 of 28 people found the following review helpful:

Best Camera I've ever owned

(4 out of 5) by Solario on Jun 21, 2009 (England)
The intelligent auto feature is superb. You don't really need to use anything else. Frame the picture, set the focus by waiting for the solid green circle in the viewfinder. Click. Perfect Picture. Macro, portrait, landscape, all sharp and optimally exposed.

It can do lots of tricks and HD video too but it is the simplicity with which it achieves great results that impress.

Why only four stars then?

If you catch bright sun at an angle behind you, the reflective screen means you have to literally guess at the picture you're taking. It's still an excellent picture and you can crop it later in a computer! It only in these extreme conditions that the viewfinder causes a problem. In all other situations it is astonishingly bright and clear

The battery life is short and you have to remove the battery to charge it. It's behind a rather delicate flap that looks like it may have a limited life in clumsey hands!

BUT. It's really is a great camera and I would not choose another model, even with the benefit of hindsight.

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:

Panasonic Lumix TZ7

(4 out of 5) by Jeremy Nel on Oct 5, 2009 (Dublin, Ireland)
Bought this as a replacement for an old trusted Canon A90 lost on holiday earlier in 2009.

The camera is very easy to use and has great picture quality with a fantastic zoom. Only drawback I found (and because I haven't read the manual yet I still haven't 'solved' the issue: The camera has a very broad ISO range (I wish my SLR had the same...) when you take photos at night it often switches to higher ISO settings, instead of using the flash, and then you end up with a very grainy image. Now there are settings you can tweak, but out of the box it is an issue. Even when it uses the flash, on some of the settings, it seems to have a very shallow flash and the background 'disappears' in darkness. I probably need to tweak some settings, but as most of the photography is daylight, this has not been a major issue.

Love it otherwise as it is small, compact and has brilliant image stabilizing when you use the zoom.I'm sure technophobes can find other issues, but for the average user it is a really great little camera.