Thinking about underwater photography, but don't
want to jump into the big bucks it might require?
Consider the latest Nikon Coolpix W300, a mass-market
camera that is rated 'water tolerant'
to 100 feet (30m) deep. Deep
enough for those divers who rarely
pass 60 feet (19m), it will conveniently
slip into a BC pocket and be
ready to grab to prove that a manta
really did fly around your head!
Not intended for serious underwater
photographers since it does
not appear to accept ancillary wideangle
or macro lenses, it's more
useful for casual snaps rather than
top-quality shots.
While the wide-angle zoom lens
is barely wide-angle (a 24mm fullframe
equivalent), it does have a 16
megapixel CMOS sensor and will
shoot video footage up to 4K at 30
fps.
And, it's social media ready.
When you come face-to-face with
that manta, you can post proof
directly on SnapBridge from your
Coolpix W300. And, there's no need
to get your Coolpix confused with that of another
diver; they come in five different colors. Price is
around $389, a reasonable fee, but it's got some stiff
competition from a superficially similar Olympus.
The 12 megapixel CMOS-sensor Olympus Tough
TG5 doesn't go as deep (it's rated to 50 feet/15m).
Its built-in zoom is slightly more wide-angle, but it will accept an ancillary wide-angle wet-lens that's been specifically
designed for it. You can also add a ring-flash
reflector that distributes the camera's built-in strobe so
that the camera's microscope mode
is readily usable for super macro
pictures. I really have successfully
recorded a pin-head with this! It follows
closely in the footsteps of the
Tough TG4, which has had proven
success both with stills and video.
Want to go deeper? If you put
it into an Olympus underwater
housing, it will safely go to 150 feet
(45m) deep. It then accepts additional
fish-eye lenses and macro wetlenses,
and you never have to be too
worried about the housing flooding
because you didn't assemble
it correctly -- the camera itself is
watertight! I've heard some technical
divers fill the housing with water
while the camera is in it, then take
it down to extreme depths, because
the water is incompressible. Now,
I've not tried that!
Once in the Olympus housing,
the TG5 can also be paired with an
off-board strobe, just like any more serious camera --
and it can also be configured to shoot RAW files, with
all the post-processing advantages that confers. And
I've seen some brilliant pictures to prove it. The TG5
camera, for casual underwater photographers, costs
around $450, and its underwater housing is $300 extra.
--john@undercurrent.org