Concord's early-2000s budget digicam — 3.1MP CMOS, 45mm-equiv f/2.8 fixed lens, 1.5in TFT, SD card slot
The Concord 3045 was a budget digital compact from Concord Camera Corp, the US company behind the Eye-Q line of low-cost digicams sold through supermarkets and catalogue retail in the early-to-mid 2000s. Flickr's camera database files it among the Eye-Q family, and in the UK it turned up boxed at pocket-money prices.
It is built around a 3.1-megapixel CMOS sensor with an interpolated 5-megapixel output option, behind a fixed lens of about 45mm equivalent with an f/2.8 maximum aperture and a 4x digital zoom in place of optical zoom. A 1.5-inch colour TFT LCD handles framing and playback, storage is 16MB of internal memory plus an SD card slot, and the camera includes a built-in flash and a digital voice-recorder function with USB transfer.
Like most Concord digicams it is a simple auto-everything snapshot tool, slow by modern standards and weak indoors, with the crunchy lo-fi output typical of small early CMOS sensors. That look is now the main reason to buy one; it also makes a low-stakes first camera for a child or student who wants something disposable-cheap.
Used examples are cheap and often boxed and barely used. Check what battery it needs and that the contacts are clean, confirm the camera powers up and writes to a small SD card (avoid SDHC), and check the LCD for bright-spot damage. Internal memory is tiny, so a working card slot is essential rather than optional.