Olympus's 2004 fixed-lens Camedia — 3.2MP CCD, 33mm equiv f/2.8 lens, xD storage; sold as D-395 in the US
The Olympus Camedia C-160 was a fixed-lens budget digicam announced in March 2004, sold in North America as the D-395. It was the zoom-less bottom rung of the Camedia line, above only the very cheapest models, and a follow-on to fixed-lens Camedias like the C-150 that traded zoom for a lower price.
It uses a 3.2-megapixel 1/2.7-inch CCD behind a five-element 5mm f/2.8 autofocus lens, equivalent to about 33mm on 35mm film — mildly wide and fixed, with no optical zoom. Shutter speeds run from 2 seconds to 1/800, sensitivity is automatic with a low ceiling around ISO 150, and images are composed on a 1.5-inch LCD or optical finder. It offers TTL auto exposure, four scene modes and several flash modes, stores to xD-Picture Card, and takes two AA batteries.
With no zoom and a low ISO ceiling this is a daylight snapshot and Y2K-digicam-collector camera: point it at well-lit subjects and the f/2.8 lens and CCD produce likeable, period-typical colour. The fixed 33mm-equivalent view actually suits street-style shooting better than many slow zooms of its class.
As with all xD-era Olympus compacts, a working card slot and ideally a bundled xD card are the main value factors, since the format is discontinued. AA power keeps it simple to run. Check the small LCD for scratches, confirm the flash charges, and inspect the battery bay for alkaline leakage after years of storage.