Nikon Coolpix P80 Review

Review Date: June 9th 2008
Author: Mark Goldstein

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Page 1
Introduction / Ease of Use
Page 2
Image Quality
Page 3
Sample Images
Page 4
Design
Page 5
Specifications
Page 6
Conclusion

Conclusion


Ratings (out of 5)
Design
4.5
Features
4.5
Ease-of-Use
4.5
Image Quality
3.5
Value for Money
4.5

The Coolpix P80 is an excellent first attempt at a super-zoom camera by Nikon, but it's ultimately let down by image quality that is worse than some of its main rivals. Nikon have worked hard to ensure that the P80 is competing on a level playing field, and the P80 looks and feels very similar to the offerings from Olympus, Fujifilm and Panasonic, with a near-identical feature-set. The P80 is impeccably built, even more impressive given its budget price-tag, and the uncluttered design makes it very intuitive to use, albeit at the cost of relying more heavily on the menu system to access certain key features. The 18x lens is obviously the star of the show, and for most photographers the Nikon Coolpix P80 will cover all the bases, with the exception of ultra-wide angle pictures. The lens is fast, effectively image stabilized and doesn't suffer from too much distortion - Nikon have even thoughtfully included an option to reduce any unwanted effects. Performance is less impressive, with a brief but noticeable lock-up between single images and a disappointingly slow continuous shooting speed, although focusing is quick and accurate even at the telephoto end of the zoom. Which brings us to the P80's achilles heel, namely image quality. Noise and colour artifacts are obvious at the slow ISO speed of 200, with anything above ISO 400 almost a complete write-off, which limits the kind of lighting conditions in which you can use the P80. There's also some fairly obvious purple-fringing if you look closely enough, and the maximum shutter speed of 8 seconds is limiting for this class of camera. The 1cm macro mode can't make up for this camera's other deficiencies, and whilst image quality isn't that bad, it isn't great either, and certainly not as good as our current super-zoom of choice, the Fujifilm Finepix S8000fd. All of which means that while the Nikon Coolpix P80 is, as Nikon proudly claim, currently the World's smallest 18x camera, it sadly isn't the best.

Page 1
Introduction / Ease of Use
Page 2
Image Quality
Page 3
Sample Images
Page 4
Design
Page 5
Specifications
Page 6
Conclusion

DIWAPhotographyBLOG is a member of the DIWA organisation. Our test results for the Nikon Coolpix P80 have been submitted to DIWA for comparison with test results for different samples of the same camera model supplied by other DIWA member sites.

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