The Advantix F620 was a zoom-equipped APS point-and-shoot from Kodak's Advantix family, sold in the early 2000s above the fixed-lens budget models in the line. Like all Advantix cameras it exposed APS cassettes with selectable Classic, HDTV and Panoramic framing, and was aimed at family users wanting a step up from a basic compact.
It carries a one-touch 2x power zoom — marketed by Kodak as a 30-60mm zoom, with spec listings quoting 24-48mm at f/4.5-8.4 — paired with an infrared autofocus system focusing from around two feet. The automatic flash offers fill, flash-off, nightview and infinity modes with a quoted range of up to about 14 feet, and film loading, advance and rewind are fully motorised.
Among APS compacts the F620 sits midpack: more flexible than the fixed-lens Advantix models thanks to the zoom and true autofocus, but slow at the long end of the lens. It suits APS-era collectors and anyone assembling a set of Kodak's Advantix range rather than photographers seeking a usable daily film camera.
APS film ceased production in 2011, so shooting one means expired cassettes with unpredictable colour, and many listings are effectively for display or parts. Check the power zoom runs through its range, the flash charges promptly, and the film door latches securely; verify the camera fires with batteries fitted, as it is entirely battery-dependent.