Kodak's late APS compact — 25mm f/5.6 glass lens, two-zone AF, flip-up flash, AAA-powered, C/H/P formats.
The Advantix T60 was a slim autofocus compact for the Advanced Photo System, introduced in 2003 near the end of Kodak's Advantix line as an affordable alternative to similarly equipped rivals. It joined the T-series alongside the T550 and T700 in the format's final years.
It uses an all-glass 25mm f/5.6 lens with a two-zone autofocus system focusing as close as 0.8m (2.6ft), with shutter speeds from 1/90 to 1/250 second and compatibility with APS film from ISO 50 to 800. The flip-up flash reaches around 4m (13ft) and offers fill, off and night modes, framing covers the APS-standard C, H and P print formats, and power comes from two AAA batteries in a body weighing about 170g.
As one of the last Advantix models it is tidy, pocketable and genuinely simple, and AAA power is a rare convenience in a segment full of lithium-cell cameras. It suits APS collectors and casual shooters of expired cartridges; the slow f/5.6 lens means daylight or flash only.
APS film was discontinued in 2011, so stock is expired and processing is specialist-only, pushing many T60s into the display and prop market. On inspection, load fresh AAA cells and confirm power-up, flash charge and flip-up action, check the cartridge door and format selector, and price untested examples accordingly.