Konica Minolta's Konica Revio Z2 — pocket APS zoom compact with 24-48mm f/4-7.6 lens and built-in flash
The Konica Revio Z2 was a pocket-sized zoom compact for the Advanced Photo System (APS), sold by Konica as part of its Revio family of miniature APS point-and-shoots. Following Konica's 2003 merger with Minolta, cameras from this line are catalogued under the Konica Minolta brand, though the body itself carries only Konica badging.
The camera used a Konica 24-48mm f/4-7.6 zoom lens with five elements in five groups and a minimum focus distance of 0.5m. Its programmed shutter ran from 2 seconds to 1/500, with automatic film-speed setting from ISO 25 to 3200. It offered a built-in flash, a 10-second self-timer, date imprinting and automatic film winding in a body of roughly 95x60x28mm weighing about 150g, plus a small removable self-portrait mirror on the front.
As an APS compact the Revio Z2 was aimed at snapshot users who wanted something genuinely pocketable: drop-in film loading and selectable print formats made it simple to operate. The slow lens at the long end means the flash does much of the work indoors, and the small viewfinder suits casual framing rather than precise composition.
APS film was discontinued in 2011, so the Revio Z2 can only be shot with expired stock and processing options are limited — many examples now sell as display or collection pieces. On working examples check that the camera powers up, the flash charges, the zoom runs without error, and the data-panel LCD is legible.