Nikon Coolpix P330 review
High image quality, even better videos and competitively priced, but performance is a letdown
Specifications
1/1.7in 12.0-megapixel sensor, 5.0x zoom (24-120mm equivalent), 200g
Sensor size is one of the key determining factors for image quality, so it’s great to see so many large-sensor compact cameras passing through our labs. The Nikon P330’s 1/1.7in sensor is around 50 per cent bigger than the ones used in most compact cameras. It’s paired with an f/1.8 lens, which gathers more light than usual to improve image quality in low light. This advantage is lost at the long end of the 5x zoom, though, as the aperture closes down to f/5.6.
These are promising specs, but Nikon isn’t the only manufacturer to come up with this recipe. The P330 faces stiff competition from the Fujifilm XF1, Canon PowerShot S110 and Panasonic Lumix DMC-LF1. The P330 is currently the least expensive of the four, though.
It certainly doesn’t look cheap with its magnesium alloy shell, adorned with a mode dial and command dial. There’s another wheel on the back, which controls the aperture in aperture-priority and manual exposure modes, and also speeds up menu navigation. That’s fortunate, because access to many functions is via the main menu only. There’s a customisable button on the front – we used it to access the ISO speed – but no quick-menu system to jump to other key settings.
PERFORMANCE
Performance in normal use is pedestrian, taking two seconds on average between shots. This increased to around six seconds in raw mode, and the camera didn’t respond to any input while it was saving raw shots. Continuous shooting was at 10fps for 10 frames, but the camera took 26 seconds to save them. For more sustained bursts, we had to settle for 0.7fps shooting. Selecting raw and continuous modes together still allowed 10fps shooting, but it took 42 seconds to save them. The slower, longer-lasting burst mode ran at 0.17fps for raw – that’s the slowest continuous performance we’ve ever measured. Even the video mode was slow, taking around three seconds to get going from the time we pressed the record button.
Battery life is another weak area, at 200 shots. We don’t normally scrutinise recharging times, but the four-and-a-half hour quoted time seems slow. Charging happens in the camera so you can’t charge one battery while using another. You can’t shoot while it’s charging, either.
It’s not all doom and gloom, though. The ten-shot buffer can be used to save photos while the camera is simultaneously recording 1080p videos. Unlike most other cameras that offer this dual recording mode, these photos are as sharp as the camera’s normal output and not simply 1080p video frames that have been upscaled to a higher resolution. The only downside was that we had to wait for them to be saved after video recording has finished.
The photo on the left was taken while simultaneously recording a video (hence the 16:9 aspect ratio). Details are much sharper than the same mode in the Panasonic LF1 (right), which looks suspiciously like an enlarged 1080p frame rather than the sensor’s native resolution – click to enlarge
Other welcome features include GPS and an integrated neutral-density filter for reducing the amount of light reaching the sensor – useful for controlling motion blur in photos and videos. Nikon hasn’t included an orientation sensor, though; portrait-shaped photos must be rotated manually.
VIDEO QUALITY
Video quality is this camera’s best asset. Details in its 1080p clips were astonishingly sharp, with subtle details rendered with absolute precision. Both the autofocus and zoom were smooth and virtually silent. Manual exposure control is sadly unavailable but the exposure compensation button becomes an exposure lock button while recording – so you can avoid sudden changes in exposure when light levels vary.
The 16Mbit/s bit rate wasn’t quite high enough to avoid compression artefacts in fast-moving scenes, but it does mean that videos last for up to 29 minutes without exceeding the 4GB individual file limit for SD cards – which use the aging FAT32 file format. Slow-motion capture is available, too, with half-speed playback at 720p and quarter-speed at VGA resolution.
Basic Specifications | |
---|---|
Rating | **** |
CCD effective megapixels | 12.0 megapixels |
CCD size | 1/1.7in |
Viewfinder | none |
Viewfinder magnification, coverage | N/A |
LCD screen size | 3.0in |
LCD screen resolution | 921,000 pixels |
Articulated screen | No |
Live view | Yes |
Optical zoom | 5.0x |
Zoom 35mm equivalent | 24-120mm |
Image stabilisation | optical, lens based |
Maximum image resolution | 4,000×3,000 |
File formats | JPEG, RAW; QuickTime (AVC) |
Physical | |
Memory slot | SDXC |
Mermory supplied | 15MB internal |
Battery type | Li-ion |
Battery Life (tested) | 200 shots |
Connectivity | USB, AV, micro HDMI |
Body material | magnesium alloy |
Lens mount | N/A |
Focal length multiplier | N/A |
Kit lens model name | N/A |
Accessories | USB cable |
Weight | 200g |
Size | 61x107x32mm |
Buying Information | |
Warranty | one year RTB |
Price | £239 |
Supplier | http://www.wexphotographic.com |
Details | www.europe-nikon.com |
Camera Controls | |
Exposure modes | program, shutter priority, aperture priority, manual |
Shutter speed | 60 to 1/2,000 seconds |
Aperture range | f/1.8-8 (wide), f/5.6-8 (tele) |
ISO range (at full resolution) | 80 to 12800 |
Exposure compensation | +/-2 EV |
White balance | auto, auto (warm lighting), seven presets with fine tuning, manual, Kelvin |
Additional image controls | contrast, saturation, sharpness, Active D-Lighting, noise reduction, ND filter |
Manual focus | Yes |
Closest macro focus | 3cm |
Auto-focus modes | multi, centre, flexible spot, face detect, tracking, target finding |
Metering modes | multi, centre-weighted, centre, face detect |
Flash | auto, forced, suppressed, slow synchro, rear curtain, red-eye reduction |
Drive modes | single, continuous, self-timer, AE bracket, HDR, panorama |