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First Impressions

Although we still have some reservations about the Coolpix A - specifically its relatively slow maximum aperture and high price tag - its reasonably fast focusing and sensible level of customization helped make it pretty enjoyable to use.

Adjusting anything through the camera's interactive control screen requires rather a lot of button pressing (you can't use the control dial to scroll around the screen or to scroll through the options of the currently highlighted setting) but considered customization of the camera's two function buttons puts your most-used features at your fingertips. And, pleasantly, if you've assigned a function with multiple settings to either of the buttons, you can hold it down and spin the dial to jump to your desired setting.

The camera's Auto ISO works much like that on previous generations of Nikon's DSLRs - you can set the upper limit and the shutter speed at which it'll push the ISO up (anywhere from 1 - 1/1000th sec in third stops), which makes perfect sense for a camera with a prime lens. We used 1/30th though it's tempting to bump this up a bit to reduce the risk of subject movement or shaking the unstabilized lens.

Auto ISO is available in combination with Manual exposure mode, but you can't adjust exposure compensation at this point, which will disappoint some shooters.

The system worked well enough for our shooting needs that we were able to re-dedicate the ISO/Fn2 button to control Active D-Lighting, leaving the front button to act as AEL. Slightly unexpectedly this led us to discover that you can't make any adjustments to exposure when AEL is active - we're used to being able to change aperture and retain the same exposure value or compensate up or down from the locked value.

At first look the JPEGs seem consistent with the company's DSLRs, both in terms of color and sharpening. and the retractable lens made it more pocketable than its obvious peers, such as Fujifilm's X100S or Sigma's DP Merrill series cameras.

Samples Gallery

There are 21 images in our samples gallery. Please do not reproduce any of these images on a website or any newsletter / magazine without prior permission (see our copyright page). We make the originals available for private users to download to their own machines for personal examination or printing (in conjunction with this review), we do so in good faith, please don't abuse it.

Unless otherwise noted images taken with no particular settings at full resolution. Because our review images are now hosted on the 'galleries' section of dpreview.com, you can enjoy all of the new galleries functionality when browsing these samples.

Nikon Coolpix A Preview Samples

Nikon Coolpix A preview samples gallery - Posted on April 3rd 2013
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Comments

Total comments: 431
1234
phazelag
By phazelag (4 days ago)

This camera looks awesome, but I have been leaning towards the Sony RX100. I was thinking it maybe more versatile. Another option I am curious about is the canon eos M with the 22mm f2. It's bigger but I have seen it for $499 brand new. I am wondering if that would be a great camera and worth extra bulk for the low price. Or is the low price a sign its a loser? I have an XZ-1 but really want to step it up without carrying my DSLR.

Comment edited 2 minutes after posting
0 upvotes
gwilliam927
By gwilliam927 (5 days ago)

I think the nikon camera is the best camera and it is so easy to use .You can find more information how , it’s packed full of useful features that can make it a lot easier to take simple shot. more information .http://www.nikonp500.net

Comment edited 2 times, last edit 2 minutes after posting
1 upvote
avicenanw
By avicenanw (3 weeks ago)

Anybody know if it can do 35 mm crop like the Ricoh GR?

0 upvotes
GDMitchell
By GDMitchell (3 weeks ago)

For that price it ought to come around to your house and process the shots for you and bung them in an album too

1 upvote
R Butler
By R Butler (5 days ago)

It doesn't, no.

0 upvotes
Minolta4Life
By Minolta4Life (3 weeks ago)

$1,100.00...hahahahahhahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahhahahahahahahahahahahahah..........hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahah. Hope I made my point.

2 upvotes
avicenanw
By avicenanw (3 weeks ago)

They were asking that price before Ricoh unveil the much superior GR at $300 less. I bet their price is already falling.

0 upvotes
GDMitchell
By GDMitchell (3 weeks ago)

At $300 less i'd say hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha. Have I made my point. It's a fancy point and shoot.

0 upvotes
mrwul
By mrwul (3 weeks ago)

Set aside the price, an increasing group of people are not in favour of carrying around a bulky DSLR.

Instead they seek an outstanding compact camera, fitting in a big (coat) pocket, or a small 'belt bag', with preferrably an APS-C sensor.
They may be the "once in a while photoshooters", but whilst doing so, they donot wish compromise on quality too much, accepting that compact cameras are simply incomparible to DSLRs.

I think there aren't too many compact camera's with an APS-C sensor.

Fujifilm x100s:
127x74x54mm (5x2.91x2.13"), 16.3 MP, 2.8" screen (460.000 dots), 35 mm, abt usd 1400

Leica X2:
124x69x52mm (4.88x2.72x2.05"), 16.2 MP, 2.7" screen (230.000 dots), 36 mm, abt. usd 1950

Nikon Coolpix A:
111x64x40mm (4.37x2.52x1.57"), 16.2 MP, 3" screen (921.000 dots), 28 mm, abt. usd 1100
(famous D7000 sensor)

The Coolpix A is the smallest and have a 3"/921.000.
In this specific segment, at this moment, I believe they offer competitive product.
=

0 upvotes
raimaster
By raimaster (3 weeks ago)

Ricoh GR :
117x61x34mm have 3" 16,3MP (sensor K5IIs) 3" 1.230.000 28mm f/2.8 with 9 blades, built in ND for about USD.800, - you know the winner already.

0 upvotes
hiplnsdrftr
By hiplnsdrftr (3 weeks ago)

Thankfully the Ricoh GR might force down the price of the Nikon A.

0 upvotes
gooseta
By gooseta (3 weeks ago)

"an APS-C compact with a fixed 28mm equivalent F2.8 lens - is the latest example and is something that would have seemed incredibly unlikely just a few years ago."

DPREVIEW HAVE YOU GONE NUTS

SIGMA DP1 DP1s DP1x DP1m
ALL APSC
ALL 28mm f2.8!!

1 upvote
allendelasaguas
By allendelasaguas (3 weeks ago)

I had the same thought.
+1

0 upvotes
R Butler
By R Butler (5 days ago)

The DP1 was the camera that proved it wasn't as unlikely as it had seemed, up until that point.

It's the latest example of the trend that the Sigma started (which I think I acknowledge somewhere else).

0 upvotes
rfsIII
By rfsIII (4 weeks ago)

It's got nice sharp corners, that's for sure.

0 upvotes
MarcMedios
By MarcMedios (1 month ago)

Another absolutely useless P&S and POS camera that will be purchased by a few people with more money than sense.

1. Non-interchangeable lens and not even a zoom? Toy camera.
2. No viewfinder? Soccer mom
3. That ugly round appendage you have to pay extra for, which increases the size of the camera considerably? An afterthought

I'd rather buy a Fuji X20, really, APS-C or not

0 upvotes
gooseta
By gooseta (3 weeks ago)

well actually, ALL of the best performing lenses in the world are primes, and good photographers use them to their advantage rather than zooming for everything.

6 upvotes
hiplnsdrftr
By hiplnsdrftr (3 weeks ago)

As a professional photographer I will say this...

I almost never use a zoom lens. Even if my P&S camera has one. I sometimes use a zoom on my pro bodies but its a Canon L zoom.

On small P&S cameras I never use the viewfinder if there is one, I much prefer using the screen. I find it to be much more dynamic style of shooting as opposed to pressing a cigarette pack sized camera up against my face.

I don't care about the accessories, their design or their price as I'm not going to buy them.

As it stands the Nikon A and the Ricoh GR are the closest thing there are to a digital Contax T3. Which is like having my prayers answered.

3 upvotes
mrwul
By mrwul (2 weeks ago)

Whilst also having an old Coolpix and regularly using its small zoom, I wonder whether I would be missing this feature. For instance, if you wish to shoot a detail of a building. Personally I think a 2x (maybe 3x) high quality zoom would be very nice.

0 upvotes
lorenzo de medici
By lorenzo de medici (1 month ago)

Another camera from Nikon that will appeal to a very small market segment. If you like this style of camera (I do not), wait a year until they are selling for half price. The optical viewfinder is very cool but $450? Please.

1 upvote
kecajkerugo
By kecajkerugo (1 month ago)

it is a good tool but non of the tools mentioned by many of you is noticeable better! They are quite similar under low ISO indeed....and for ISO on the 3200 level Nikon starting to lose slightly ...compare with e.g E-M5. Fuji X systems is in a different league as hight ISO is concerned (there are real photos out there...)
You may see something else, something different of course....amazing times we can chose our cameras per something else that picture quality which is simply great for most of the high tech toys!

0 upvotes
Chrysippus
By Chrysippus (1 month ago)

I was considering getting a Fuji X100S or a Nikon D7100 and when I saw the Coolpix A announcement for the first time I thought it was rubbish. However,when I compare the A with the XE-1, D7100, X100S and the Olympus OM-D using the dpreview tool, to my eyes there's no question that the Coolpix A is noticeably better than the others in terms of IQ (I only compared RAW at lowest ISO). I asked my 15-year old daughter to come and check as well without telling her anything and while scanning every inch of the test image she chose the Coolpix A every time. This morning I played with it in a local shop and although my heart was set on a X100S, I must say that the Coolpix A is now making me think twice. I think the IQ is amazing.

3 upvotes
gooseta
By gooseta (3 weeks ago)

fuji has the best high iso aps-c sensor EVER.

0 upvotes
Bamboojled
By Bamboojled (3 weeks ago)

Wrong, just take a look at DXO ratings.

There is a new High ISO king and it's called the Coolpix A.

Even comparing the Fuji to the Nikon A, it is pretty clear in RAW that the Fuji is applying heavy handed noise reduction, just take a look at the yellow hair next to the robot at 1600 ISO in RAW and you will see that that is the case.

Now if you are saying that noise at that ISO is not as apparent on the FUJI, you would be correct, but i would point out that neither is any semblance of detail...

0 upvotes
zodiacfml
By zodiacfml (1 month ago)

I would rather save money and put up with the size of a Canon G1X.

1 upvote
AbrasiveReducer
By AbrasiveReducer (1 month ago)

While I think 28mm-only is too restrictive (but I would have jumped on it if it had arrived at the same time as the Ricoh GRD) hopefully this will put an end to the idea that a good wide angle zoom is just as good as a fixed focal length. This may come close to being true when size and cost don't matter but with a small camera, it matters. In any event, it's certainly more flexible than trying to photograph a group of people at a table with a 35mm lens.

0 upvotes
Paul Guba
By Paul Guba (1 month ago)

If you shoot raw (I do exclusively) then I think the Nikon looks great. If you shoot jpeg mostly I would go for Fuji. Fuji is quite remarkable at high ISO so if you are in dark areas frequently could be important. Not so much for me.

0 upvotes
Gully Foyle
By Gully Foyle (1 month ago)

The A's RAW is astonishing! And I wouldn't tell apart its jpgs from the D7100. I wonder what went wrong with the OLFP removal on the D7100. The X is less sharp (not soft though) but more consistent across the ISO range. And I think that's the whole point of the X-Trans.

1 upvote
sean lee
By sean lee (1 month ago)

I was fan for x100s but I heart is turning to coolpix A

1 upvote
KW Phua
By KW Phua (1 month ago)

Why most of the raw files are so soft. Compare to Canon G15 the jpeg has more detail then most of them at ISO1600

0 upvotes
Bamboojled
By Bamboojled (1 month ago)

LOL, that has got to the worst attempt at trolling I have ever read...

Come on, I know you can come up with something better, just write down a few thoughts on paper and decide which one will be best.

6 upvotes
KW Phua
By KW Phua (4 weeks ago)

CP A is best here. Even better then D7100. The rest of the files are not so raw. If their jpeg engine process these "raw" file to jpeg, every detail and color will be gone, IOM. I also wonder why Canon and Olym can produce better jpeg. May be they process from direct raw not cooked raw.

0 upvotes
Tahir Hashmi
By Tahir Hashmi (1 month ago)

I don't understand why Coolpix A and D7100 raw photos at low ISO look worse than their JPEG counterparts. Has ACR still not been updated to cope with OLPF omission or is it something else? I don't see such bad raw output with CNX2 at home.

Edit: Maybe the globe actually has bad print and surface. The "issue" doesn't seem to be present with other parts of the scene.

Comment edited 5 minutes after posting
0 upvotes
peevee1
By peevee1 (1 month ago)

As usual with Nikon, high-ISO JPEG is very unappealing.

0 upvotes
Digitall
By Digitall (1 month ago)

Up to ISO 800 is quite acceptable, more than this becomes more evident the noise. ISO noise the X100S is a winer no doubt.

0 upvotes
Bamboojled
By Bamboojled (1 month ago)

However when you look at the RAW shots the X100s looses a lot of detail.
Almost like strong noise reduction is being applied in RAW on the X100s.
Take a look at the hair next to the robot at ISO 1600 in Raw.

1 upvote
plasnu
By plasnu (1 month ago)

Impressed.

3 upvotes
AngryCorgi
By AngryCorgi (1 month ago)

Amazingly, it resolves more detail than the much ballyhooed X100S and definitely more detail than the X100S + WCL-X100 adapter. Just really, really impressive.

8 upvotes
AngryCorgi
By AngryCorgi (1 month ago)

I'm floored by how sharp this lens is when stopped down and with what appears to be minimal CA. Kudos to Nikon for putting a good lens on this thing.

6 upvotes
jnk
By jnk (1 month ago)

The Coolpix A is critically sharp with excellent details comparing to other cameras including the D800E - to my eyes - the images are true raw rather then cooked raw.

3 upvotes
rhlpetrus
By rhlpetrus (1 month ago)

Excellent samples, thanks. Very capable camera, I only wish for a portrait tele adapter and a faster AF system, closer to the V1's. But interesting camera anyway.

3 upvotes
Tom Caldwell
By Tom Caldwell (1 month ago)

So Nikon made a Ricoh GRDIV clone? Without the depth of firmware, multiple custom modes, IS and a f1.9 lens, need I continue?. Oh, it has an aps-c sensor? Hooray! I guess the sensor must cost a lot.

0 upvotes
R Butler
By R Butler (1 month ago)

In fairness, the APS-C sensor will give it more control over depth-of-field than the GRDs. (A GRD at F1.9 would have the same d-o-f as a 28mm F8.8 on full frame, while the A would have the d-o-f of a 28mm F4.3)

I'd agree the Coolpix A doesn't have as effective a user control system as the GRDs.

2 upvotes
photo perzon
By photo perzon (1 month ago)

I bought it at Best Buy for $899
HEre's how:
Walk in and speak with a manager. Ask him to match the Best Buy sale for $899 on Feb 19. Tell him managers have been matching it.
I got it.
Now I have two A's. One I got at JR, one at Best Buy. I'm comparing the two for differences. So far none.
One advantage of f2.8 is a lot is in focus. The 1.8 cameras are great but a lot if not in focus.
I find the IQ same as X100S, at half the volume! Pocketable, and when you use it at parties or dinners, it looks like "a normal camera." You don't look like the enthusiast.

3 upvotes
Tahir Hashmi
By Tahir Hashmi (1 month ago)

+1 for the camera looking "normal" at parties or dinners!

1 upvote
Paul Farace
By Paul Farace (1 month ago)

and looking like an enthusiast at a party is bad? Would you rather look like a drunk dooshbag with a lampshade on your head, or the creepy guy hitting on the married women, or the boring, non-interesting guy? I have met more interesting folks (and yes women!) as the "photo enthusiast" than as the nudnik at a party!

0 upvotes
hiplnsdrftr
By hiplnsdrftr (3 weeks ago)

The camera looking "normal" is actually a huge advantage for a lot of my assignments.

0 upvotes
Digitall
By Digitall (1 month ago)

Nikon what people want is a digital version of S3!
By the way nice camera, the price is not so nice..., and this camera deserve a better design IMO, more refined design, to not look like her "low-cost" P&S sisters. But it is still desirable!

0 upvotes
rocklobster
By rocklobster (1 month ago)

Trouble is the Coolpix name implies P&S - really bad move Nikon.

1 upvote
JadedGamer
By JadedGamer (1 month ago)

Bah, all cameras with an "auto" setting can be classified as "P&S" when that setting is used :)

0 upvotes
hiplnsdrftr
By hiplnsdrftr (3 weeks ago)

Yes, Nikon blew it by naming it Coolpix. I will have to overlook this one flaw.

0 upvotes
ijv
By ijv (1 month ago)

Get that lens up to an acceptable competitive level and we have a winner. Image stabilized and at least 2.0, but ideally 1.8.
Also a 50 mm version would be a dream.

1 upvote
Pat Cullinan Jr
By Pat Cullinan Jr (1 month ago)

Make that IS, 2.0, and a VF.

1 upvote
Bamboojled
By Bamboojled (1 month ago)

I'm having trouble understanding your competitive level comment as from the RAW samples it smokes the X100s which on paper has a faster better lens.
Why don't you take a moment and start comparing it against any of the point and shoots out there and then start comparing it to the DSLR's.
This camera has blinding sharpness and detail and the lens is absolutely performing corner to corner; something the faster lenses on other brands fail to do...

1 upvote
pannyics
By pannyics (2 months ago)

It's ironic that Nikon put a 1" sensor in their interchangeable lens mirrorless cameras and an APS-C sensor in their point and shoot

4 upvotes
Pat Cullinan Jr
By Pat Cullinan Jr (1 month ago)

Why don't Nikon run their project plans past us piranhas fisrt?

1 upvote
jnk
By jnk (2 months ago)

Nikon Coolpix A scores 80 on DxOMark:

http://www.dpreview.com/forums/thread/3455416

0 upvotes
Timmbits
By Timmbits (2 months ago)

It makes me want to buy an NX300 with the 30mm f2 lens! ;-p

5 upvotes
BillPhillips
By BillPhillips (2 months ago)

Thank you for making this camera Nikon.

Good prime lens (check)
Good sensor (check)
Simple direct control of aperture and exposure (check)
Small size with folding lens (check)
Quiet operation! (check)

To the nay-sayers: It is a matter of priorities. Why are some asking for one half f-stop in lens speed and then comparing to cameras with smaller, less sensitive sensors? If zoom is a high priority you will not understand this camera. Zoom lenses have their strengths and compromises. Interchangeable lens systems are great. A good built in finder is great. Somewhere you pay a cost in size, weight, price, and/or another feature.

I would gladly sacrifice the display for lots of memory, battery life, the best bundled software and a viewfinder, returning to a film-like shoot in the moment and process later philosophy. But I'm not holding my breath.

2 upvotes
Timmbits
By Timmbits (2 months ago)

they're not talking about a half f-stop difference.
with pi (3.14) being involved, each time you reduce the aperture number by 1, you approximately triple the surface area of the opening. going from 2.8 to 1.8 is rather a significant difference.
each third (approximately) triples the opening's surface area (and light it lets in).
diameter_opening = focal_length / aperture_number
area_opening = opening_diameter * pi

Not sure what posts you were referring to, but you don't have to go to a small sensor camera to get a bright lens in a compact package. Think of the Canon EOSM, Sony NEX6/NEX7, Samsung NX210/NX300/NX1000 (which, incidentally, with the 30mm f2 lens, are the same size as the Nikon A)

Comment edited 2 times, last edit 9 minutes after posting
1 upvote
Karroly
By Karroly (1 month ago)

"each time you reduce the aperture number by 1, you approximately triple the surface area of the opening"

Timmbits, I am afraid you did not use your own formulas very well and the second one is just wrong. The correct one is :
area_opening = (radius^2)*pi = (diameter^2)/4*pi

If we compare two apertures A1 and A2, and their corresponding diameters D1 and D2, we have :
D2=D1*A1/A2.
So starting from A1=F2.0 and decreasing by 1 gives A2=F1.0 thus D2=2*D1 (with an area multiplied by 2^2 = 4, greater than 3)
But starting from A1=F16 and decreasing by 1 gives A2=F15, thus D2=(16/15)*D1 and an area increase of (16/15)^2, that is to say an area multiplied by about 1.14... a 14% increase.

0 upvotes
Bamboojled
By Bamboojled (1 month ago)

BillPhillips- I agree with you 100%!!!
The funny thing is that this camera outperforms the other cameras that have faster lenses at the corners even after they stop down to match the 2.8 aperture.

0 upvotes
mosc
By mosc (1 month ago)

I don't mind 28mm equiv or f2.8. I just mind the $1100 thing. It's clearly a sharp lens and f2.8 is pretty fast even for low light flash free indoor work. However, it costs basically twice as much as an RX100, which does have a smaller sensor but managers f1.8 which to me is nearly a wash (aperture equiv says f4.2 vs f4.9). Oh, and the RX100 has a zoom which some people care about I just leave it at 28.

A has a ND filter, which is nice no doubt. RX100 has image stabilization and a zoom, which are also nice. Very comparable cameras to me, not very comparable prices.

Comment edited 3 minutes after posting
0 upvotes
TakenUserName
By TakenUserName (2 months ago)

Did Nikon do ANY marketing research? Or conversely, what type of unbiased marketing research would even suggest the viability of this feature set.

Two features are totally missing. A viewfinder - optical or electronic, it doesn't matter...and definately not a $400+ option protruding from the top! The second feature is interchangable lens capability (with an adapter for existing glass as the camera can accomodate a more compact lens design of the same DX sensor focal length.)

VIEWFINDER - People are getting tired of 100% dependence on the LCD screen, washed out and reflecting your face in outdoor settings. Belive me, I hear it from my wife with her P&S to the extent that I am now shopping for small compact. An OVF/EVF at least gives you the option.

LENS. Prime lens is fine...but at least give people the option with interchangability. Fixed prime on rangefinders left the station with digital zoom P&S and has become a consumer expectation.

2 upvotes
TakenUserName
By TakenUserName (2 months ago)

Hit character limit so a little clarification on "lens" above before somebody posts "Leica". Consumer level $50 35mm film cameras all had fixed primes and people were satisfied. With the advent of digital and LCD screens, zooms became an expectation. On the high end, Leica and other rangefinders accomodated other focal lengths with FOV markings in the viewfinder. Even their zoom was 3 set focal lengths in one lens rather than continuous zoom. Now EVF allows zooms in rangefinders like theNikon V2, Sony NEX 6 and 7, as well as some Fuji models.

Omitting the viewfinder and interchangability when creating a small alternative to the DSLR with a crop sensor. They modeled after the wrong nitch camera (Fuji 100s) when they should have modeled after the the Fuji EM-1 which evolved from the Fuji 100 and has the far better feature set.

Nikon is late to the game. Do they have time to "evolve" the line like Fuji did? For my wife, will be a NEX-6 for her bday in May. Nikon eliminated itself.

Comment edited 7 minutes after posting
1 upvote
Timmbits
By Timmbits (2 months ago)

I'm sorry to have to say this, but your post is a little bit absurd. While you've just described a third of the mirrorless cameras already on the market, lens interchangeability no longer allows this to be the camera what it is and was intended to be (pocketable, compact, flat). Obviously they could have chosen a better lens, but perhaps they didn't want to go head to head with an urban-shooter like the x100s, preferring to offer a wide angle landscape camera instead.

Nikon aren't about to introduce a viable alternative to their DSLRs, the weapon they are totally invested in for the market share wars. And the f2.8 makes sure they are not competing with their lucrative fast primes that fetch top dollar.

See, offering the same thing with different labels slapped on is kind of redundant anyways - you found the nex6, and should be glad. (However, if you want something that comes close to what you are describing, the NX300 plus 30mm f2 (45mm equiv) may be more to your taste). ;)

Comment edited 2 times, last edit 5 minutes after posting
3 upvotes
Timmbits
By Timmbits (2 months ago)

PS: did you mean Fuji X-E1 which evolved from the X-pro1? that is definitely a NICE 35mm f1.4 lens that comes with that. (53mm equivalent)

Comment edited 30 seconds after posting
1 upvote
Provia_fan
By Provia_fan (1 month ago)

TakenUserName, like many people, have as their only concept of a camera an SLR or more likely a DSLR and compact cameras are like the Fujifilm X series (which i love and are terrific cameras). Long before people like him were around there were such things as the Voigtlander Bessa-L or the Zeiss Ikon SW Super, which are where cameras such as the Nikon A are picking up from and rightly so. If you want a camera which is pocketable and will offer great image quality, a camera with optional viewfinder and pretty much of a flat design is what you need. But personally I expected a lot of those kinds of comments from a lot of people, it's a by-product of the digital revolution in photography. People nowadays don't even stop and think how did people back in the days of traditional photography ever produce such brilliant work without all the bells and whistles and tricks we have today.

1 upvote
Bamboojled
By Bamboojled (1 month ago)

LOL...why dont you compare the NEX6 to the Nikon A in the comparison chart.
The A is on another level.
The A is also much smaller.
Since you like Sony so much, why not compare it to the $2700 RX1, at that point I think you will find the camera very appealing for it's size and level of performance

0 upvotes
alfredo_tomato
By alfredo_tomato (1 month ago)

I like that it looks like a point and shoot to the casual viewer. Good IQ and reasonable speed is all I need.

I hope it sells well.

0 upvotes
SLRist
By SLRist (2 months ago)

@Satchel - Image stabilisation? How many DSLRs do you shoot with that use IS for wide angle primes. What's that you say? None? The only thing missing here is a built in EVF.

0 upvotes
Timmbits
By Timmbits (2 months ago)

he is very very very angry out of frustration: he has the shakes.

1 upvote
TJGKG
By TJGKG (2 months ago)

Note to DPR: I just got an email from NikonUSA, the GP-1 GPS unit is not compatible with the Nikon A. There is no GPS capability on this unit. Only the Wifi dongle is available for this product.

1 upvote
Satchel
By Satchel (2 months ago)

No stabilisation?! RUKM? Would likely have bought one but that's just freakin' stupid. Oh, and spare me the predictable and ignorant "you don't need IS on a wide-angle lens" responses. Ya right.

2 upvotes
Bamboojled
By Bamboojled (1 month ago)

LOL.... so after seeing the samples and the comparisons against DSLR's, high end Point and Shoots, and Mirrorless cameras, where the Nikon A bests most of these handily, and still fits in your pocket.
You claim that you would have purchased it but it doesn't have IS so no sale?
Why don't you just say, nice camera but I can't afford it, we would have respected you more for it :)

0 upvotes
CameraLabTester
By CameraLabTester (2 months ago)

Getting better there, Nikon!

Now, on your next upgrade for this model, put the OVF on the upper corner within the camera body (built in)... and watch sales soar.

Getting there, Nikon...

Getting there...

.

Comment edited 1 minute after posting
1 upvote
thegraduate
By thegraduate (2 months ago)

I am wondering whether if the UR-E24 adapter will significantly increase the size of the camera... I would probably consider leaving this on all the time for protection, filters and the lens hood. It is too bad Nikon has not posted a picture with these accessories mounted on the camera, unlike the OVF...

0 upvotes
thegraduate
By thegraduate (2 months ago)

Just saw a photo of this setup at:

www.nikonrumors.com

0 upvotes
ijv
By ijv (2 months ago)

Also the thing looks awesome. Like a tank. This is what I want my camera to be. Black serious photo taking machine. I want a battery that just lasts. Durable and resistant to moisture. Fast operation. And fits in a pocket. We are getting there ...

0 upvotes
ijv
By ijv (2 months ago)

Very cool. Glad to see Nikon stepping up ... but ... we need a faster lens to make this thing exciting. At least 2.0 but why not 1.8. Nikon is a leader in engineering lenses. I am a fan of the GRD line, and this is way cooler because of the APS sensor. But we need a kick ass lens here.

1 upvote
hiplnsdrftr
By hiplnsdrftr (2 months ago)

Camera sounds amazing. Probably the smallest APS camera available.

"It has a 7-bladed diaphragm and a lens shutter that work together for essentially silent operation."

The NEX cameras sound like a bomb went off when you push the shutter (GF1/GX1 also).

For anyone desiring a truly compact, pocketable yet versatile (has a built in flash) silent camera... this is it. Without any other real alternatives. Thats worth a $1,000 to me.

2 upvotes
peevee1
By peevee1 (2 months ago)

Versatile? With a fixed 28 mm eq lens? :) :) :)

5 upvotes
hiplnsdrftr
By hiplnsdrftr (2 months ago)

Yes, versatile.

2 upvotes
Bamboojled
By Bamboojled (1 month ago)

If you can have it with you always and know that the image rivals or surpasses the best APS-C cameras out there, I would say that is extremely versatile.

0 upvotes
lighthunter80
By lighthunter80 (2 months ago)

With a f2.0 lens and below $1k this would be a great camera. No other APSC camera is so small. I would get one... Sad that they went with only 2.8

5 upvotes
hiplnsdrftr
By hiplnsdrftr (2 months ago)

I'm pretty sure the lens would be significantly larger at F2.0...

Having a fixed lens allows the flash to remain small and unobtrusive...

You can't have everything, specially when it's a camera this small. Really, the more I look at the specifications the more I want it!

And I'm a Canon CPS member.

2 upvotes
BillPhillips
By BillPhillips (2 months ago)

Your hang up is one half of an F-stop on a small camera with a good high ISO sensor?

0 upvotes
Timmbits
By Timmbits (2 months ago)

@bill: in case your Nikonfanmindset forgot, high iso gives you noise and that's not where you get control over DoF from.

@lighthunter: "no other apsc camera is so small"... well, the NX210, with the pancake 30mm f2 is! and the NX300 with same 30mm f2 will be only 11mm wider (about 1/3").

1 upvote
Bamboojled
By Bamboojled (1 month ago)

Wrong, the NX210 is not smaller, and why don't you take a minute to compare the studio samples and the 30mm F2 does not have the corner performance that this camera has even stopped down to 2.8.

0 upvotes
lmtfa
By lmtfa (2 months ago)

Another BS test camera to see how many saps will buy into this. This camera plus a viewfinder comes in at a cool $1400.

My Nikon DSLR's (D700 & D90) plus great glass can't be beat. My P510 & P7100 are just good, nothing special. The big disappointment is the Nikon 1 V1. This camera was a major fail even before it came out and Nikon keeps trying to convince folks to buy into the system by pooping out revised models. Al la V2, J3 andS1. My purchase of the V1 was a bad decision but I was enamored by Nikon and so are many others.

I bought the Sony NEX 6 with the 16-50mm kit lens, after seeing this camera I am so glad I strayed.

Note: Pocketable for $1000, oh please.

Comment edited 5 minutes after posting
3 upvotes
Michael Jardine
By Michael Jardine (2 months ago)

This probably requires a separate thread but, as a D700 owner, I'd be curious to hear what you like about the Nex6; when you use it, how you compare the quality to the D700, etc.

0 upvotes
TakenUserName
By TakenUserName (2 months ago)

I agree, and words cannot express my dissatifaction with the Coolpix A. While I am a D7000 user, currently shopping for my wife moving up from a P&S. She demands a viewfinder - OVF or EVF - and a zoom range can attain with multiple lens. Both are lacking.

It realy comes down to 2 cameras, Nikon V2 (only because could use my lens for extreme tele) and the front runner Sony NEX-6. The Sony NEX-7 and the Fuji EM-1 are out of budget, but probably would have been pushed for the Coolpix A if had similar features and the ablity to accept my current glass. Instead, Nikon elects to mimic the Fuji 100 that they initially brought out before expanding the line to includ feature (like interchangable lens) with the Pro and EM models.

1 upvote
sean lee
By sean lee (2 months ago)

Wow,…
I was dreaming so many years if there's pocket size camera with big sensor.
And these days many small cameras with big senors are coming out and even some of them are in retro style.
But I can't buy any yet because I can't decide which one is the best for me.
I am just doing search and search and reading forums and actually I am very enjoying it.
I wish I can find mine soon. ^^

0 upvotes
samsamsamsam
By samsamsamsam (2 months ago)

I'm more the 50mm lens user. I think today you can make easly two or three shots and stich them together to have a 24 mm.

2 upvotes
Ben O Connor
By Ben O Connor (2 months ago)

I am using Olympus XZ-1 , and also its new rival, they want to keep its light power at F 1,8 - 2,5. And to keeping its power They make a big lens, that it does not fit behind lens blades... Smilar thing occoured in G 1X of canon. Well it also has APS-C (DX ) size sensor... many times bigger compare to XZ-1

Well you might say "well they are both zoom cameras, its a fixed lens!" then how can you tell me Leica´s X1 & X2 ?

Its just interesting to see, such a big sensor, preety small diameter glass.

0 upvotes
marike6
By marike6 (2 months ago)

The Canon G1X sensor is actually not APS-C, but is actually smaller than both Canon APS-C (1.6X), and the APS-C size sensors that Nikon uses (1.5X crop).

Comment edited 2 minutes after posting
0 upvotes
Timmbits
By Timmbits (2 months ago)

18.5mm divided by 2.8 doesn't make for a large opening, and you don't need much glass for that.

0 upvotes
Bamboojled
By Bamboojled (1 month ago)

Timbits- don't know your issue, but obviously you are talking from a lack of information.
First it does not matter how much glass was used to create this lens as so far it smokes anything Samsung (LOL) has to offer.
Second the lens and sensor were designed to work together with special filter array on the sensor to make up for the short working distance from the lens (AKA Pocketable)
Third the lens has if i remember correctly 7 elements in 2 or 3 groups with one aspheric lens in it.

0 upvotes
JEROME NOLAS
By JEROME NOLAS (2 months ago)

As soon as the price comes down to sane levels, I will buy it.

0 upvotes
Timmbits
By Timmbits (2 months ago)

hey Nikon, you sold your first unit! =D

0 upvotes
rsjoberg
By rsjoberg (2 months ago)

From the comments it appears that this is not a camera for everyone, but it certainly is a camera for me. Besides the obvious use as a carry everywhere camera I can see two uses for it that make it ideal.

The first is that I can use it to cover the wide end when I go light with my D7000, 35mm and 60mm lens. The second is as a supplemental digital camera when I'm out shooting with my 4x5 field camera.

I see the limitations as simply part of the package. I carried a Rollei 35 as a backup camera back in the day. Later I picked up a Contax G with the lovely Zeiss lenses, but it couldn't fill the Rollei's place because of the size —same with the Leica M3 before that. As far as the cost goes, I'll wait until I see a full test and can get some kind of discount, but I've blown so much on photography over the years that $1000 more or less just doesn't seem like that big a deal.

3 upvotes
David Zamora
By David Zamora (2 months ago)

Finally, a comment that makes sense. It's tiring having to read all of the comment bashing by the younger crowd that doesn't understand the need for such a camera.

2 upvotes
Bearsdenoboe
By Bearsdenoboe (2 months ago)

If Nikon is hoping to launch a full range of professional products with this, they urgently need a 'pro' name: Coolpix is a pathetic, amateurish attempt at Japanese English, and anyway "Cool" went out years ago, thankfully, with Tony Blair. "Dig this, Chicks!"

I do hope that they expand soon to a FF/FX version with interchangeable lenses, with a fast AF system. Users of existing Nikon lenses would flock to such a system (when a DSLR is not needed), but Nikon would open up a new market here and need not be afraid of losing customers.

Without such a model however, they will lose out heavily to Fuji, as soon as a FF X-Pro 2 comes out (next year?). Some indeed prefer Nikon's colours (for landscape) compared with the more muted tones emerging from otherwise superb Fuji results (that 35 mm lens!), and would happily remain loyal, assuming a mirrorless FF 24 - 36 MPX.

1 upvote
iamthenewguy
By iamthenewguy (2 months ago)

So do you think FinePix, as in Fuji FinePix X100, sounds better? I'm guessing most people will drop the coolpix and just call it the Nikon A just as people dropped the FinePix from the X100.

0 upvotes
JadedGamer
By JadedGamer (1 month ago)

So what does "Ixus" mean? You know, Canon's name for their cheapest P&S cameras (as opposed to the PowerShot branding for the more expensive ones)?

0 upvotes
artHarris
By artHarris (2 months ago)

I have always wanted a truly small camera which is capable of producing high quality BIG prints; my Nikon D300s is too big to carry on ski tour! For years I have had to be happy with the small Canons; the G12 being the latest, and I love its close focusing (flowers) and pivotting screen; the true view-finder is a real plus.
Now, I am spoilt for choice, but it is truly a no-brainer - the Sony RX100 beats all. It may not have the pivotting screen and lacks a view-finder, but in all other respects, it has everything. And this Nikon "Copy" doesn't have any extras to justify its almost double price; even at a similar price, the Sony wins. As for the Canon G1X: too big, no close focus, no pivoting screen. So, put to the real test over the last 2 months, the Sony is everything I had hoped for.

Comment edited 2 times, last edit 4 minutes after posting
2 upvotes
TJGKG
By TJGKG (2 months ago)

I agree with you. I also own the RX100 and think it is a marvelous camera. The pictures look just as good as ones taken with my D7000 (which has the same sensor as the Coolpix A) and I don't have to lug all that equipment around. So for twice the price as the RX100, I don't see any advantage.

2 upvotes
Total comments: 431
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