Fujifilm's 1989 power-zoom 35mm compact — 40-80mm Fujinon, full auto, sold as Discovery 800 Zoom in the US
The DL-800 Zoom was a 35mm autofocus zoom compact introduced by Fuji in 1989, sold in the United States as the Discovery 800 Zoom and in Japan as the Zoom Cardia 800; European examples also appear badged FZ-800 Zoom. It sat near the top of Fuji's point-and-shoot range just before the DL-900 arrived.
It pairs a motorised 40-80mm Fujinon power-zoom lens with automatic focus, exposure and flash control, so the photographer only frames and shoots. A sliding cover protects the lens and doubles as the power switch, and the built-in flash fires automatically in low light. Power comes from a single CR-P2 lithium battery, which drives the autofocus, zoom, wind and flash.
It appeals to shooters who want a simple late-eighties zoom compact with a usable 40-80mm range, and to collectors filling out the Discovery and Cardia family. The power zoom is slow by later standards and the body is chunky in a pocket, but operation is genuinely point-and-shoot with nothing to set.
Nothing works without a healthy CR-P2 battery, which is still obtainable but not cheap, so factor a fresh cell into the price. Verify the zoom travels through its full range, the flash charges promptly and the motor wind advances smoothly; check the film door for tired light seals and the battery bay for corrosion.