Kodak's 2007 budget C-series compact — 6.2MP CCD, 3x 36-108mm zoom, 2.4in LCD, AA power
The Kodak EasyShare C613 was a budget point-and-shoot in Kodak's C-series, the company's entry-level digital line, released in 2007. It followed the C-series formula of simple automatic operation, AA power and the one-touch Share button that tagged pictures for printing or emailing through Kodak's EasyShare software.
It used a 6.2-megapixel CCD behind a 3x optical zoom lens covering a 36-108mm equivalent range at f/2.7-4.8, with a 2.4-inch LCD on the back and no optical viewfinder. Storage was 16MB of internal memory plus an SD/MMC card slot, power came from AA batteries, and it recorded 640x480 QuickTime video clips alongside a set of scene modes.
The C613 suits buyers after a cheap, simple CCD-era digicam for casual snaps. Reviewers of the period praised the colour output for the price but noted the LCD washed out badly in direct sun, and there is little manual control beyond exposure compensation and scene selection.
On the used market these sell very cheaply and AA power keeps them easy to run — no proprietary charger to hunt down. Check the SD/MMC slot pins, the battery-door catch (a common wear point on AA compacts), LCD condition, and confirm the lens extends and retracts without grinding.