Olympus's long-zoom 35mm AF compact — the Superzoom 110, ~38-110mm zoom, program AE, 1997.
The Olympus Superzoom 110 was a 35mm autofocus zoom compact camera made by Olympus, introduced in 1997 in the Superzoom line of point-and-shoot cameras. It offered a longer zoom range than the earlier Superzoom 70, aimed at users who wanted more telephoto reach in a single automatic 35mm body.
It is a full-frame 35mm autofocus camera exposing standard 24x36mm images, not half-frame. It has a built-in motorised zoom lens reaching about 110mm at the long end, as the model number indicates, with active autofocus and programmed automatic exposure reading DX film speed. A built-in flash with multiple modes is fitted, film loading and advance are motorised, and the camera is battery-dependent with no manual exposure control. The finder zooms to match the lens.
The extended zoom to short telephoto suits travel, general and casual portrait photography where reaching more distant subjects matters, without carrying extra lenses. Automatic operation and motorised film handling keep it simple, and the built-in flash covers indoor and fill work. It favours convenience and reach over manual control.
On the used market, check the battery compartment and contacts for corrosion, a common fault in motorised AF zoom compacts, and confirm the longer zoom extends and retracts without straining. Test the autofocus, flash and film transport, inspect the zoom lens for haze and fungus across its range, and verify the film-door light seals and LCD frame counter still work before use.