Hello again, Rustynut.
I guess you mean the s7000. I have the baby brother of the family, the s3000, which is structurally not too dissimilar - I've pretty much given up on finding a scope that will work with it for digiscoping.
I've realised that one of
the main "good digiscoping camera" attributes is a physically small lens, which - preferably - zooms internally, rather than the lens moving in and out of the body of the camera.
Our cameras have a physically large lens, and alignment with the exit pupil of the scope is a nightmare, and I can't find a workable adaptor set-up.
Plus (and this is where it gets confusing - anyone should feel free to put me right) with a small lens camera, the CCD and camera are set up to work well together: the CCD will be "filled" by the information coming in through the small lens.
While this also applies to large lensed cameras, it does mean that the CCD in camera like ours "needs" a bigger amount of light/information coming through the lens to fully use the CCD; the tiny amount that comes in from the exit pupil of a scope is not enough to fill the CCD, which is geared up for a bigger image reaching it.
Or something (hopefully you get the gist of that garbled nonsense!)
Bottom line is: the Nikon Coolpix 4500 and the Contax SL300RT are excellent digiscoping cameras in no small part
because of their tiny lenses.
This thread is about the s5000, but everything in it applies to our cameras:
http://www.birdforum.net/showthread.php?p=182493#post182493
and you might also want to read:
http://www.birdforum.net/showthread.php?t=19128
to see where I'm coming from about the small lens advantage.
The Fujis are cracking cameras, but just not ideal for digiscoping...