Praktica's Sport-line 35mm AF compact — 3-element 35mm lens, DX coding, motor wind, red-eye flash, two AAs.
The Praktica SK750 was a 1990s 35mm autofocus compact sold under the Praktica brand's budget Sport line, also seen labelled Praktica Sport SK750. Like other Praktica compacts of the era it was far-eastern-made consumer hardware wearing the old Dresden name, positioned a step above the fixed-focus Sport models thanks to its autofocus and DX film-speed reading.
The lens is a three-element 35mm wide-angle with autofocus, paired with autoexposure to keep operation fully automatic. Camera-wiki records motorised film advance and rewind, DX code reading to set film speed, and a built-in flash with red-eye reduction. An extra-large viewfinder aids framing, and power comes from two AA batteries, which also drive the motor and flash.
As a user camera it is a straightforward step up from focus-free snappers: the autofocus and DX reading remove the main sources of user error, so it suits beginners and casual film shooters wanting sharper everyday results. The 35mm wide-angle lens favours street scenes, groups and holiday snaps rather than portraits or close-ups, and the three-element optic stays modest at the edges.
Used examples are common and inexpensive. Confirm on fresh AA cells that the motor loads, advances and rewinds film, that autofocus is heard working and the flash charges with red-eye lamp functioning, and that the DX contacts in the film chamber are clean. Check the battery compartment for corrosion and the back door for light-seal wear before running a test roll.