Canon's tiny zoomless ultracompact — 5MP 1/2.5in CCD, fixed 39mm f/2.8 lens, sold as SD20/IXY L2 abroad
The Digital IXUS i5 was Canon's smallest ultracompact of September 2004, an update of the Digital IXUS i that raised resolution to five megapixels. It was sold as the PowerShot SD20 Digital ELPH in North America and the IXY Digital L2 in Japan, and Canon offered it in several body colours.
It used a 5.0-megapixel 1/2.5-inch CCD behind a fixed 39mm-equivalent f/2.8 lens with no optical zoom, paired with Canon's DIGIC processor. Video recorded at up to 640x480 and 10fps, storage was SD or MMC card, and power came from the small NB-3L lithium-ion battery. The body measured roughly 90x47x19mm and weighed about 100g before the battery.
With no zoom and largely automatic operation it suited pocket carry and casual snapshots rather than deliberate photography. The single focal length keeps results consistent and the tiny body disappears into a pocket, though the fixed lens and small screen limit flexibility for anything beyond quick day-to-day shooting.
Check the NB-3L battery and charger are included and that the cell still holds charge, as replacements are third-party only. The spec sheet lists SD and MMC, not SDHC, so test with a low-capacity SD card. Inspect the screen for scratches and the body edges for dents, and shoot a test frame to confirm the CCD renders cleanly.