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Samsung EX1 review

Our Rating :
Price when reviewed : £350
inc VAT

Samsung's EX1 is a very good camera that enthusiasts will love. It's got an excellent lens and the articulated screen is useful, but it doesn't quite do enough to beat the cheaper LX3.

Specifications

1/1.70in 10.0-megapixel sensor, 3.0x zoom (24-72mm equivalent), 356g

http://www.parkcameras.com
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The EX1’s biggest strength is undoubtedly the Schneider Kreuznach 24-72mm f/1.8-2.4 optical zoom lens, but with a 3x optical zoom, it doesn’t have the reach of the longer lenses that we see on a lot of today’s compact cameras. That might sound like a bad thing, but its large f/1.8-2.4 maximum aperture combined with the relatively large sensor means it lets much more light in than virtually every other compact on the market – of course making an exception for cameras with even larger sensors, like Sigma’s DP2s.

The zoom covers a useful range – 24-70mm is seen as the most flexible and useful range for a carry around lens on a DSLR – and it’s also sharp throughout its range bar some minor corner softness at wider angles when shooting relatively flat frame-filling subjects. It controls chromatic aberrations and flare quite well, but distortion at the wide end of its focal length is quite severe if you’re shooting RAW; Samsung does correct a lot of the distortion if you’re using the in-camera JPEGs, though. At the telephoto end of its range, the EX1’s distortion is minimal.

Samsung EX1 front

While the distortion in wide-angle RAW images is quite disconcerting, we found that the JPEGs were slightly over-sharpened, producing a slight halo along high-contrast edges. Despite these minor quibbles image quality was very impressive in both RAW and JPEG modes, with vibrant and accurate colours as well as good contrast. Unfortunately, image quality in JPEGs shot at higher ISOs suffered from Samsung’s heavy-handed approach noise reduction, so we’d definitely recommend shooting RAW at higher sensitivities.

The EX1 has a tendency to over-expose shots and the metering system does seem a little hit-and-miss. We quite often found ourselves re-shooting with some exposure compensation dialled in after reviewing a shot. The focusing system was also slightly unpredictable if you’re using multi-point AF, as it often chose to disregard obvious subjects in favour of something less conspicuous. Thankfully the manual AF point selection function is well-implemented and solved most of the problems.

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Basic Specifications

Rating ****
CCD effective megapixels 10.0 megapixels
CCD size 1/1.70in
Viewfinder N/A
Viewfinder magnification, coverage N/A
LCD screen size 3.0in
LCD screen resolution 614,000 pixels
Articulated screen Yes
Live view Yes
Optical zoom 3.0x
Zoom 35mm equivalent 24-72mm
Image stabilisation optical, lens based
Maximum image resolution 3,648×2,736
Maximum movie resolution 640×480
Movie frame rate at max quality 30fps
File formats RAW, JPEG, QuickTime (H.264)

Physical

Memory slot SDHC
Battery type 3.8V 1,130mAh Li-Ion
Battery Life (tested) 240 shots
Connectivity USB 2.0 Hi-Speed, mini-HDMI
HDMI output resolution 1080i
Body material Aluminium
Lens mount N/A
Focal length multiplier N/A
Kit lens model name N/A
Accessories USB, charger, Samsung RAW conversion software
Weight 356g
Size 65x114x30mm

Buying Information

Warranty 1 year parts and labour
Price £350
Supplier http://www.parkcameras.com
Details www.samsung.co.uk

Camera Controls

Exposure modes program, shutter priority, aperture priority, manual, dual IS, smart auto, scene
Aperture range f/1.8-6.7 (wide), f/2.4-7.2 (tele)
ISO range (at full resolution) 80 to 3200
Exposure compensation +/-2 EV
White balance auto (with face-detect), 6 presets, manual
Additional image controls contrast, saturation, sharpness, image style
Manual focus Yes
Closest macro focus 5cm
Auto-focus modes centre, multi, selection, tracking, face detection, macro
Metering modes multi, centre-weighted, centre
Flash on, off, slow sync, red-eye reduction
Drive modes single, continuous, self-timer