Skip to main content

SeaLife DC800 Goes Down 200 Feet

SeaLife has rolled out its new DC800 digital camera, offering underwater photographybuffs something better than packing a waterproof case around an everyday point-and-shoot camera. For one thing, the DC800 is good down to depths of 200 feet, enabling experienced divers to captureimages in a wide variety of environments. What’s more, the DC800 offers five unique underwater shooting modes especially designed for underwater use.

“The DC800 gives users the ability to have more control and creativity over their images,” said SeaLife’s sales and marketing director Joe Ifi, in a statement. “With its new features and upgrade in technology geared towards the SCUBA diver and underwater enthusiast, the DC800 is sure to add a new dimension of fun in and out of water.”

The DC800 offers an 8 megapixel resolution, a 2.7-inch LCD display screen, a 4× optical zoom, SD/SDHC image storage (along with 32 MB of internal memory), and USB connectivity. The camera runs off a rechargeable lithium-ion battery, and an removable polycarbonate, rubberized shell that’s designed for solid underwater grip. SeaLife says the DC800 offers a shutter response time as fast as 0.1 seconds, and the camera can be used with SeaLife’s Digital Pro Flash designed for underwater use.

The camera’s five underwater scene modes include three with underwater color corrections (Oceans Blue, Oceans Green, Rivers/Lakes), and two modes that accommodate the Digital Pro external flash. An additional “SPY” mode enables the camera to take pictures automatically at fixed time intervals (say, every five seconds or every five minutes until the camera is full), enabling divers to place the camera, start it up, then leave the scene to capture events that would never happen in the presence of divers.

The SeaLife DC800 is available now at a suggested price of $549.95.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
The best photo printers you can buy in 2024
Alan compares draft, standard, and high-quality photos from Epson's EcoTank ET-8500.

A comparison of draft, standard, and high-quality photos from Epson's EcoTank ET-8500. Tracey Truly / Digital Trends

If you love sharing photo prints or building physical photo albums, you might want to upgrade to a photo printer. When manufacturers optimize printers for pictures, the results can match or exceed that of the best printers available.

Read more
Crutchfield sale: Save on Canon, Sony and Nikon mirrorless cameras
Canon EOS R5

Photography can be a fun and even lucrative endeavor, although it also can be exceedingly expensive, with some of the best full-frame cameras on the market easily reaching and even exceeding one or two thousand dollars, and that's without taking into account the cost of the lenses. Luckily, there is a great sale at Crutchfield right now on various cameras and camera kits, and you can actually grab yourself some excellent cameras, whether you're just starting out or want to upgrade to the next level. To that end, we've picked some of our favorite deals below, although it's well worth checking out the full Crutchfield sale that's happenning now.

What you should buy in Crutchfield's camera sale
If you're just starting out with photography and don't want to spend the thousands of dollars you do for the slightly better cameras that you'll find in the mid-range, the Canon EOS R100 is an excellent option, and this kit includes a lens as well. It has a 24.1-megapixel sensor for high-quality photography, a 3-inch screen so you can get a better sense of what you're filming, and, of course, the RF-S 18-45mm f/4.5-6.3 lens that the kit comes with. It can also connect with both Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, and all of that comes packaged at , which is $100 off the usual $599 price tag.

Read more