Picture of the Nikon Coolpix P4 digital camera
The Nikon P4 is a good point-and-shoot camera but its vibration reduction facility could be better

Review: Nikon Coolpix P4 digital camera

Banish blurred photos with Nikon’s Vibration Reduction technology

Written by Gavin Stoker, Computeractive

Larger Image

Verdict:

Good Points
• Vibration Reduction technology previously found on more professional lenses
• Good image quality under normal conditions
• User-friendly screen menus that are quick to navigate

Bad Points
• Plastic look and feel
• Battery life could be improved
• Vibration reduction may limit camera shake but doesn’t prove a total cure

Verdict
The Nikon Coolpix P4 offers a dose of medication, but not a cure, for shaky hands and out-of-focus images

Rating:

3

Price:

£329

Fed up with red eyeballs and bleached out faces when using camera flash?

The obvious solution is to turn off the flash and boost the sensitivity of the camera sensor to cope, or a slower shutter speed to let in more light.

However, an unwanted side effect is that, unless using a tripod or steady surface, any slight hand movement is also captured, resulting in image blur.

Advertisement

The 8.1 megapixel Nikon Coolpix P4 aims to solve this with built-in Vibration Reduction, something normally found on expensive lenses for professional cameras.

Its other key features include a 3.5x optical zoom, 2.5in LCD, with which to compose and review photos, 16 selectable scene modes, which optimise camera settings for common conditions and subjects, plus video clips with sound at a sufficient quality to watch on the TV.

All useful, but features that can found elsewhere for less.

The 23Mb of internal memory, which stores just six full resolution snaps is disappointing, although there’s a slot for an SD memory card to extend it. A slimline battery that provides 200 shots from a single charge is half the capability of rivals.

The Nikon's design is similarly conservative, yet reasonably weighty and well built, with some nice champagne metal details off-setting its mainly plastic body. The P4’s menu screens and icons are clear and easy to navigate, helping the overall operation.

A bottle cap-style mode wheel on top of the P4 allows for choice of resolution, light sensitivity (measured in ISO ratings, but capped at a surprisingly low ISO400) white balance, camera set up, video capture, scene modes and three stills capture modes: automatic, program and aperture priority, the last two allowing for finer image adjustments.

Used purely as a fully automatic point-and-shoot though, outdoors the Coolpix P4 delivers the goods and provides even exposure and realistic colours.  It has to be said, however, that the two Vibration Reduction modes reduce but don’t fully eliminate the bugbear of image blur, particularly in interiors without flash.

It seems, sadly, that we’re a little way off manufacturers working miracles.

Related reviews
Fujifilm FinePix F11
Verdict: The Fujifilm F11 is a very easy-to-use digital compact camera that is best suited to photographers taking images under a wide variety of lighting conditions
Rating: 4/5
Price: £299

Manufacturer: Nikon

See more Digital Cameras

Tags:

Reader comments

More from Computeractive

News

The latest home computing news

Downloads

The best PC tools, applications and more

Reviews

Independent opinions on new hardware and software

Step-by-step guides

Easy-to-follow projects with pictures

PC Help

Solve PC problems with our Q&A

Videos

PC projects demonstrated and product reviews

Articles

An in-depth look at how to get the best from your PC

Magazine

What's coming up in Computeractive

Forums

Get help with your PC problems from our readers

Competitions

Your chance to win computing prizes

Shopping

Great deals on products, services and more

NEW! Computeractive CD Rom 11
All 26 issues of Computeractive from 2008 on one CD-Rom.

Ultimate Guide to Disc Burning
Everything you need to know about creating your own discs.

Create your own calendars softwareCreate your own Calendars
The fun and easy way to create your own calendars!

Computeractive - Issue 280Computeractive Back Issues
Missed an issue? Click here to find a back issue

Find the Best Prices

Save money on hardware and software with our price comparison service: Best Prices

Advertisement

Free email newsletters

Techno babble demystified...

[Display all definitions]

Or type in any computer-related word and click "Go"

Blogs

Windows Watch

Windows Watch

Keeping an eye on the latest XP and Vista news

Outlook 2007 email controversy

One of the major changes in Outlook 2007 had nothing to do with the Ribbon but that Word was used to display...

Download Junkie

Download Junkie

Your daily dose of download discussion

Backup important data with SyncBack SE

Keeping certain files backed up helps to keep items safe in case anything disastrous happens to your computer, but although most of...

The test bed

The test bed

The hottest products, news and gossip from PCW's Labs

Why we may never see a Core i7 Apple machine

With the recent crop of new Apple desktop hardware - The Mac Pro , iMac and Mac Mini (all of which we...

Primary Navigation

© Incisive Media Ltd. 2009. Incisive Media Limited, Haymarket House, 28-29 Haymarket, London SW1Y 4RX, is a company registered in England and Wales with company registration number 04038503

Search computeractive.co.uk