Olympus's 1996 auto 35mm zoom compact — 38-80mm f/4.5-5.9, DX 50-3200, CR123A; US Accura Zoom 80.
The Olympus Superzoom 800 was a fully automatic 35mm zoom compact issued in 1996, part of the mainstream Superzoom family below the Mju series. In North America it was sold as the Accura Zoom 80 (also badged Infinity Accura Zoom 80). It is a different camera from the later Superzoom 800S.
The lens is a 38-80mm f/4.5-5.9 zoom of five elements in four groups, with autofocus and programmed autoexposure over a 4-second to 1/500 shutter range. Film speed sets from DX coding across ISO 50-3200, advance and rewind are motorised, and there is a built-in flash, self-timer and LCD frame counter. Power is a single CR123A cell; the body weighs 251g.
It is an easy family compact: switch on, zoom between moderate wide-angle and short telephoto, and let the automation work. The slowish lens means the flash does the indoor lifting, and results are best on ISO 200-400 negative film for everyday and holiday shooting.
Like most 1990s AF compacts it is completely battery-dependent — no CR123A, no shutter. With a fresh cell the lens should extend on power-up and the flash charge within seconds; check the LCD counter for faded segments, the film-door seals, and auto-load and motor rewind on a scrap roll.