Olympus's 1997 big-finder 35mm zoom compact — 38-70mm f/5.6-9.6, full auto, AA power; US Accura 700BF.
The Olympus Superzoom 700BF was a 35mm autofocus zoom compact first sold in 1997 in Olympus's long-running Superzoom series; in the US it was badged Accura 700BF. An upgraded version, the 1999 Superzoom 700XB, added an optional Quartz Date function and an even larger viewfinder.
It pairs a 38-70mm f/5.6-9.6 zoom (camera-wiki lists 35-70mm) with fully automatic exposure, aperture and focus. The large real-image viewfinder zooms with the lens, the flash offers auto, off and fill-in modes, film handling is DX-coded with auto load, wind and rewind, and there is a self-timer and tripod socket. Power is two AA batteries.
It is a chunky but straightforward family compact: the oversized finder makes framing easy and everything is automated. The slow lens leans on flash indoors and the zoom action feels sluggish by later standards, so it suits unhurried general and holiday shooting.
Used examples are fully battery-dependent, so test with fresh AAs: the motorised zoom should travel its full range, the flash charge promptly, and auto-wind load and rewind a sacrificial film. Check the film-door light seals and that the LCD counter shows no missing segments.