Quantcast

NEW Reviews Beta Feedback

  • Print

Nikon Coolpix P4

72

Good

  • Pros
  • Effective antishake feature
  • Sleek design
  • Cons
  • Some controls are awkward to use
  • Lacks manual controls
thumb 1 thumb 2 thumb 3 thumb 4

PC World Editor's Review

by Richard Baguley

This small camera's antishake feature works well, though image quality overall is average.

Perhaps the most notable feature of the small, lightweight Coolpix P4 is its vibration reduction mode. In our informal tests, this feature did an effective job of reducing camera shake.

The basic controls on the soap bar-styled P4 ($400 as of 6/15/06) are well laid out: The shutter release button falls under the index finger and the zoom sits under the thumb, so both can be used while holding the camera in one hand. The other controls are a little awkward, though: To change the scene mode, you have to set the mode dial to "scene," press the menu button to access the list of 16 scene modes, make your selection, and then press OK to get back to shooting. That's a lot of button pressing.

In addition to full auto and program modes, the P4 has an aperture-priority mode, which is rare in a point-and-shoot. The most unusual feature, however, is the VR (vibration reduction) mode; it moves an element of the lens to compensate for hand shakes, and it's effective. (Four other recently tested models with antishake technology use electronic processing to sharpen their images.) In particular, the P4's more aggressive VR active mode significantly sharpened handheld shots; there was still some obvious camera shake, but it was greatly reduced. The P4 also offers a good selection of image controls, including contrast, sharpening, and saturation.

The camera is a little slow to start up: We found it took about 4.5 seconds before it was ready to start shooting, and there was around half a second of shutter lag. That's not particularly long, but it could lead to missed shots until you get used to it and focus ahead of time by pressing the shutter down half-way.

The images that the 8.1-megapixel P4 took were acceptable. They had a good degree of sharpness; most fine details were well preserved. The noise in the images was also acceptable; even in low light at the ISO 400 setting, the noise wasn't overly distracting, and the noise reduction mode did a good job of mitigating it further. On the downside, colors appeared muted compared with those from similar models in our tests; the images looked well exposed, but lacked impact. Also, details seemed much softer at the higher ISO settings: At the maximum of ISO 400, the images were a little blurry on close examination.

The battery life from the 1100-mAh lithium ion battery was an above-average 270 shots.

Richard Baguley

User Reviews for Nikon Coolpix P4

  • Reviewed by: d_bondi

    Duration of ownership:

    Strengths: Size, 8MP, Auto Mode, 2.5" LDD

    Weaknesses: No View Finder

    Overall Evaluation: This is a great little compact camera and the second Nikon Coolpix that I have owned. It is solidly constructed, and takes great pictures. The 2.5" LCD is great. I love the size, it fits in my pocket. With a 3 year old, my problem was my old Nikon was just too big to carry around everywhere, so I missed a lot of great moments. Not anymore. I recommend this little camera.

  • Reviewed by: gracerita

    Duration of ownership:

    Strengths: weight, size of screen, multiphoto option, price, reduced vibration

    Weaknesses: slippery body, camera design--fingers in front of lens?

    Overall Evaluation: I have a nikon 850 I bought years ago and loved it because it felt great in my hand and was easy to use. I took movies, slides and night shots to just play with the camera. It looks like what a camera should look like to take good pictures. Silly huh? This new one is small and a bit slippery that one should always use the strap.I'VE OWNED IT ONE WEEK--so no revelations about quality and using the vibration reduction feature.

Cameras Playing in PCW Video

Latest Cameras News, Reviews, How-To's