Fujifilm's Porsche-designed 2001 compact — 3.3MP Super CCD, 36-108mm equiv f/2.8 zoom, SmartMedia, NP-80.
The Fujifilm FinePix 6800 Zoom was a premium vertical-format compact unveiled at PMA in February 2001, sold in Japan as the FinePix 6800Z. Its aluminium-magnesium alloy body was styled by F.A. Porsche's design studio, and it launched alongside the cheaper 4800 Zoom as a flagship of Fujifilm's Super CCD consumer line.
It carries a 3.3-megapixel Super CCD that outputs interpolated files up to 2832x2128 (a 6-megapixel file), with 3.1MP, 1.2MP and VGA settings also available. The lens is a fast f/2.8 Super EBC Fujinon 3x aspherical zoom equivalent to 36-108mm, with macro focusing to around 20cm and a 4.4x digital zoom. Images store to SmartMedia (16MB bundled), power comes from the rechargeable NP-80 lithium-ion pack, and the body weighs a light 258g.
The 6800 Zoom appeals to collectors of early-2000s design objects as much as shooters: the Porsche-styled vertical body is distinctive in hand, and the Super CCD's interpolated output was a period talking point. As a camera it is a capable daylight snapshooter with the bright f/2.8 wide end its main practical strength.
Both consumables are obsolete: SmartMedia cards are long discontinued, and while third-party NP-80 batteries remain in production, verify the example actually charges and powers on. Check the metal body for dents (it marks the design value), the pop-up flash action, and that the camera writes to a card — SmartMedia contact faults are a frequent age-related failure.