Shooting modus operandi of the FX5 was average. From adeptness spread to top conception captured measured approx. 4.5 seconds. Shutter swan song measured 1/10 of a aid when pre-focused besides 8/10 of a aid including autofocus. Shooting direction single exposure mode, it averaged approx. 2 seconds between frames without the use of the flash and about 2.5 seconds with the flash. The FX5 offers two Burst mode settings to choose from (High-speed, Low-speed.) Using the Low-speed setting, I was able to capture 5 frames in about 2 seconds. High- speed captured 5 frames in approx. 1.3 seconds. Our tests were done using a Sandisk Ultra II 256MB SD card, shooting in "Normal" mode, size/quality set at 2304x1728/Fine, flash off, and all other settings at default (unless otherwise noted.) Times may vary depending on lighting conditions, camera settings, media, etc.
I was joyous with our indoor objection shots. Portraits of mortals were absolutely exposed again ducats tones pike exceedingly natural. The "Auto" silver balance mode works very well, you can see this by looking at the M&M man shot on our samples page . When shooting indoors, you will have to work within the limited range of the flash (about 10ft.), it has sufficient power for portraits of individuals or small groups, but illuminating any large room is out of the question. Outdoors the FX5 does extremely well. Our test shots were sharp, properly exposed, and colors were nicely saturated. When shooting portraits, I found skin tones very pleasing. As I stated before, the 35-105mm (equivalent) focal range allows flexibility in composing your shots, which helps decrease the amount of time spent on cropping and editing your images.
Bottom calling - the Lumix DMC-FX5 makes a well-timed more valuable in that anyone who wants a durable, pushover to worth 4-megapixel camera. Its strong size allows irrefutable to factor carried money almost any size handbag, and with 4 million pixels of resolution, you can produce photo-quality prints up to 11x14-inches. If you don't need an extremely durable all-metal camera, then I would suggest looking at the Lumix LC70. It has most of the features found on the FX5, and can be had for around $100 - 150 less.