Nikon Coolpix P6000 Review
Product overview
- Best price:
- £269.00 (Camerabox limited)
- Launch price:
- £338
- Launch date:
- 19th December 2008
Technical Specification
Accessories: Rechargeable Li-ion Battery EN-EL5, AC Adapter EH-66, USB Cable UC-E6, Audio Video Cable EG-CP14, Strap AN-CP18, Software Suite CD-ROMBattery Type: Rechargeable Li-ion
Camera Type: Compact
Case Included: No
Colour: Black
Connectivity: USB 2.0
Dimensions: 107 x 65.5 x 42
Display Size: 2.7
Exposure Modes: Aperture-priority;Automatic;Manual;Programme;Shutter-priority
Features: NIKKOR wideangle 4x zoom lens / Built-in Global Positioning System (GPS) / 13.5 megapixel resolution / RAW file format / COOLPIX Picture Controls / Expandable system / Wired LAN connectivity for myPicturetown
Flash Modes: Auto;Fill-in;Off;Red-Eye Reduction;Slow-Synchro
Focusing Modes: Auto;Manual
Image Formats: JPEG;RAW
Image Sensor Dimensions: 7.40 x 5.55
Image Sensor Resolution: 13.5
Image Sensor Type: 1/1.7inch CCD
ISO Settings: 100;1600;200;3200;400;64;6400;800;Auto-Hi;ISO Auto
LCD Display?: Yes
Lens: 4x Zoom-NIKKOR; 6.0-24.0mm (35mm [135] format picture angle: 28-112mm)
Longest Shutter Speed: 30
Max Aperture: 5.9
Max resolution (horizontal pixels): 4224
Max resolution (vertical pixels): 3168
Max. Captured Image Resolution: 4224 x 3168
Memory Types: SD
Metering Modes: 256 Zone Matrix;Centre weighted;Spot
Min Aperture: 2.7
Min Shutter Speed: 2000
Optical viewfinder: Yes
Optical Zoom: 4
Weight (g): 280
White Balance: Auto;Cloudy;Daylight;Fluorescent;Manual
White Balance Presets: Incandescent
MPN: VMA250B1
Price (GBP): 337.78
PhotoRadar review
Fancy the high-end controls of the PowerShot G10 without the price or the bulk? We find out if the P6000 is a viable alternative
Right now it seems as if Nikon can hardly put a foot wrong with its digital SLRs.
So when it turns its hand to a high-end compact to rival Canon's PowerShot G10, we should all sit up and take notice.
They're both aimed at keen photo enthusiasts and share similar though not identical specifications. The G10 is fat, heavy and slightly more expensive; the Nikon P6000 is lighter and slimmer and has slightly lower resolution (though 13.5 megapixels versus 14.7 is hardly a significant difference).
Image quality issues
Both have wide-angle zooms, but the Canon has a 5x zoom against the Nikon's 4x zoom. Both offer JPEG and RAW files, both have built-in anti-shake systems. On paper, there's little to choose between them. In the real world it's another matter.
The G10 suffers from the noise-reduction issues that plague all high-res/small-sensor compacts, but the P6000's problems are on another level again. Even at ISO 64, the minimum setting, the camera's noise-reduction system is hard at work, blurring away noise but also taking with it any patches of fine detail which show similar characteristics.
As the ISOs go up, the problems just get worse. This camera goes up to ISO 1600 (and ISO 6400 at reduced resolution), but by ISO 400 the smudging effect is starting to have a serious effect on image quality. We used to complain about the gritty-looking high-ISO shots of previous generations of compacts, but surely that was preferable to this 'mushing' which all the makers seem to have adopted instead?
Dull menus
This isn't the P6000's only problem. It also relies a little too heavily on its menu system for a camera in this class, and plodding through it is a pretty dull experience.Surely this would have been the perfect opportunity to introduce a Nikon D60-style graphical interface instead?
Operationally, the P6000 is pretty quick, though the G10 seems to focus just a fraction faster and is certainly quicker at saving RAW files.
Unique features
What the G10 doesn't have is the Nikon's in-built GPS and its LAN connectivity. The idea of the GPS is that each of your photos can be tagged with the location at which it was taken. It's a clever bit of technology, though you'd have to be a pretty forgetful traveller to need it.
The point of the LAN connectivity is harder to fathom. Some other CoolPix cameras are able to communicate wirelessly with an internet router and send images directly to Nikon's MyPictureTown website, where they can be shared with others.
With this one, the network connection must be made physically by cable instead – and it requires a fairly technical set-up process too. But how is this better than simply connecting the camera to an internet-enabled computer and uploading images straight from the memory card via a web browser?
Hit and miss camera
The Nikon P6000's high points include a distortion-correction option that works so well it should be compulsory; but low points include a continuous shooting speed of just 0.9fps. You can forget any thoughts of capturing next Saturday's goal-mouth action – crown green bowling's more this camera's level.
It's hard to understand Nikon's thinking. All the basics are in place – a well-made camera with good specs and all the manual controls that serious photographers would demand.
But then it's been spoiled by badly-judged image processing, a weak and uninspired control layout and innovative but complex technology which could only be of value to a very small proportion of users.
Posted by Rod Lawton on Wednesday, 15th July 2009 at 02:58pm GMT.



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