Sony announces three entry-level DSLRs: Sony Alpha DSLR-A230, A330, and A380

By | May 18, 2009, 10:04pm PDT

Summary: Roughly 15 months after Sony stormed the entry-level digital SLR market by announcing three sub-$900 dSLRs in the span of a month, the electronics giant is on the scene again with a triple-threat announcement upgrading all three models.

Roughly 15 months after Sony stormed the entry-level digital SLR market by announcing three dSLRs under $900 in the span of a month, the electronics giant is on the scene again with a triple-threat announcement upgrading all three models. The Sony Alpha DSLR-A230, A330, and A380 will replace the A200, A300, and A350, respectively, and will debut in July of this year at $549.99, $649.99, and $849.99 (with 18-55mm lenses), respectively. All three models are available for pre-order from Sony now.

The new models offer no huge surprises. As with their predecessors, the A330 distinguishes itself from the A230 by offering live-view shooting using a flip-out LCD, and sacrifices magnification on the optical viewfinder (the A230’s viewfinder magnification is 0.83x like the A200,  while the A330’s is 0.74x like the A300). And as with their respective predecessors, the A380 differs from the A330 in higher resolution (14 megapixels vs. 10). Unlike their predecessors, though, the A330 and A380 deliver the same continuous shooting speed of 2.5 fps (slightly slower than the 3 fps the A200 and A300 offered). In fact, the bump in resolution is the only way the A380 differs from the A330 aside from body design.

Speaking of which, the upgraded models sport a new, more modern-looking body design. A nice touch in the new design is that you can easily distinguish among the three models: the A230 is all black with a pebbled grip texture, the A380 is black with silver accents at the top and the same pebbled grip texture, and the A330 is available either in the same black-and-silver color scheme as the A380 (distinguishing itself from that model with a basket-weave grip texture) or in a new copper color with the pebbled texture.

Other main differences between the three new models and their predecessors are their smaller and lighter-weight bodies (the A220 weighs in at 15.9 ounces vs. the A200’s 18.8 ounces, while the A380 and A330 are just 17.3 ounces, down from 20.5 ounces for the A350 and A300); their new, more-intuitive user interfaces (with built-in onscreen Help Guides); upgraded image processors; and — in a big (and welcome) change for Sony — support for SD/SDHC memory cards in addition to Sony’s proprietary Memory Stick formats. Additionally, rather than the 18-70mm kit lenses bundled with the earlier models, the three new models will be offered with 18-55mm lenses, or for $200 more each, with both 18-55mm and 55-200mm lenses.

In addition to the new zoom and telephoto kit lenses being offered with the cameras, Sony also announced new portrait and macro lenses. All the new lenses are designed specifically to use with the APS-C sized sensors (which Sony uses in all of its dSLRs except its highest-end A900).

For specs comparisons of the A380, A330, and A230 and their likely competitors, go to the next page »

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Janice got her hands on a Nikon Coolpix 900 back in 1998 and has been a digital camera enthusiast ever since.

Disclosure

Janice Chen

Janice Chen has no business relationships, affiliations, investments, or other potential conflicts of interest relating to the content posted in this blog.

Biography

Janice Chen

Janice Chen is an editorial consultant and has been covering technology for over two decades. Serving as editor in chief at CNET and Computer Shopper magazine for many years, she oversaw product coverage for the CNET and ZDNet websites. She has appeared on most of the major morning TV news programs and was featured weekly on CNN Headline News' Hotwired segment recommending personal tech ranging from digital cameras to notebook PCs. Prior to that, she appeared with Anderson Cooper on a monthly technology segment for ABC World News This Morning. Quoted in numerous publications such as the New York Times, USA Today, and People magazine, Janice has also evaluated tech products for BusinessWeek, USA Weekend magazine, and Parenting magazine among others.

Janice got her hands on a Nikon Coolpix 900 back in 1998 and has been a digital camera enthusiast ever since. A graduate of Cornell University, she resides in Maplewood, NJ, with her husband (a professional photographer who shot his last roll of film in 2003) and their two daughters.

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