Kodak's 2004 retail variant of the CX7300 — 3.2MP CCD, fixed 37mm equivalent lens, 5x digital zoom, AA power
The Kodak EasyShare CX7310 was a 2004 variant of the entry-level CX7300, produced primarily for large retail chains in North America and now common on the UK used market. It shares the fixed-lens 3.2-megapixel formula of its sibling, with the main documented difference being an extended 5x digital zoom in place of the CX7300's 3x.
Specifications follow the CX7300 closely: a 3.2-megapixel CCD with a maximum resolution of 2096x1560, a fixed 37mm-equivalent lens, automatic ISO in the 100-200 range, a 1.6-inch LCD, and 16MB of internal memory with an SD card slot. It runs on two AA batteries and weighs around 220g with cells fitted.
Like the CX7300, this is a simple automatic snapshot camera whose CCD files have a distinct early-2000s character, and it has picked up a following among digicam and circuit-bending hobbyists precisely because it is cheap and plentiful. Buyers should not expect speed, low-light ability or any manual control.
Condition checks mirror its sibling: look for corrosion in the AA compartment, confirm the SD slot and internal memory both store images, and check the small LCD for defects. Because sellers list CX7300 and CX7310 interchangeably, verify the exact model number on the faceplate if the variant matters to you.