Purchasing Guide: The best underwater cameras Regardless of whether you need a minimized camera for an excursion to the shoreline or ski resort - or perhaps simply something that the children won't break - there are a lot of waterproof, best underwater cameras accessible at an assortment of value focuses. The majority of the cameras in our gathering are waterproof, freezeproof and dustproof, while a couple are additionally crushproof. Except for the SeaLife DC2000, the cameras have zoom focal points in the 4X-5X territory, while the DC2000 has a settled, 31mm equiv. prime. The DC2000 is additionally remarkable in having the main 1"- type sensor in the gathering, which should give it a major leg up on alternate cameras in this market portion, which utilize 1/2.3" sensors. The Nikon W100 comes in much littler with a 1/3.1" sensor proportional to what's in a cell phone. Our pick: Olympus Tough TG-5 Olympus has made a considerable lot of our most loved rough cameras and that custom proceeds with the TG-5. Normally, it can jump profound, solidify, be dropped or be squashed without avoiding a beat. It additionally has a cool following mode that keeps a log of your area and elevation amid your movements. Olympus has made various helpful frill for the TG-5, including fisheye and fax connectors and a ring streak. While the TG-5's picture quality will never coordinate a camera with a bigger sensor, for example, the SeaLife DC2000, it's still great. Having Raw help is a major ordeal, enabling you to modify difference and evacuate shading throws in submerged photographs. Execution is for the most part smart (eminently burst shooting speeds,) battery life is incredible and 4K video looks great. Drawbacks are few; The control dial is inadequately set, there's no shade need mode, the video record catch is too flush with the body and the screen scratches much too effortlessly. By and large, however, the TG-5 is the best tough camera in this class. Additionally consider: SeaLife DC2000 If its all the same to you need better picture quality and having a settled central length focal point, the SeaLife DC2000 is well worth considering. All alone the DC2000 can go 18m/60ft submerged and with its included housing* those numbers increment to 60m/200ft. The DC2000 has a 1"- type, 20 Megapixel sensor and a 31mm equiv. F1.8 focal point. Picture quality is notably superior to whatever is left of the cameras in the gathering, and Raw help gives you a chance to get the greater part of it the sensor. What you won't discover on the DC2000 is GPS, super-close full scale mode or 4K video. Battery life is moderately poor, also. Be that as it may, in case you're a jumper who needs to 'center' on picture quality, the DC2000 is effortlessly the best in the gathering.
