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Camera Test: Nikon Coolpix P5000

With this powerful little compact, Nikon puts a monster in your pocket -- and it's easy to control.


June 2007


Camera Test: Nikon Coolpix P5000
Click photo for more images of the Nikon Coolpix P5000.

Advanced compacts are pocket monsters, with nearly all of a DSLR's abilities and none of its bulk. But can they make noise!

Nikon bred a live one in its new Coolpix P5000 ($350, street). It has many of the external and some of the imaging controls of its D80 and D40x DSLRs. Can it match the image quality of its DSLR kin? Yes and no.

At ISO 64 and 100, we rank Image Quality as Excellent, thanks to resolution averaging more than 2000 lines, Excellent color accuracy, and noise levels of Low and Moderately Low. Rising noise levels drop overall IQ to Extremely High at ISO 200. And as the noise at ISO 400 crosses into Unacceptable, we still found its pictures quite acceptable.

What's Hot
• Faster than most compacts.
• Convenient external controls.
• Featherweight for its features.

What's Not
• High noise at higher ISOs.
• No Adobe RGB or RAW.
• Not-so-hot viewfinder.

Who's This For?
DSLR shooters who want a very capable pocket camera. Point-and-shooters who want more control.

Competitive Set
Canon PowerShot G7
Fujifilm FinePix E900

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But noise gets worse through ISO 2000, the highest sensitivity for 10MP capture. At ISO 3200, overly aggressive noise reduction cuts resolution to only a paltry 700 lines.

Still, the P5000 has a lot to love. The 36-126mm equivalent f/2.7-5.3 zoom has Vibration Reduction for both stills and video. Allowing shutter speeds 2 to 3 EV below normal, it can cut noise by letting you shoot at a lower ISO. It offers nice flash options, too, with a hot-shoe that supports Nikon's i-TTL external units such as the SB-400, SB-600, and SB-800 Speedlights.

It even takes auxiliary lenses: The TC-3ED Teleconverter ($250, street) is an equivalent 378mm; the WC-E67 Wide-angle Converter ($110, street), a 24mm equivalent. You'll need the UR-E20 adapter ($30, street). We tried both and found virtually no loss of resolution, though they're cumbersome to mount, and you must compose on the LCD instead of the viewfinder.

The P5000's control interface is way ahead of the typical menu-mad compact. Buttons on the back provide quick access, and an actual command dial allows speedy input of settings. The function button can be programmed for quick access to a single control of your choice.

The P5000 does have menus -- nicely organized and easy to read, with help screens for every option. The Optimize Image menu, a scaled-down version of the D80's, has five preset (and one custom) image profiles, plus four monochrome filter effects. After-shot adjustments include D-Lighting to boost shadow detail. Oddly, there's no redeye fix.

Modes include Face Recognition, which locks AF onto faces in the frame. The best: Panorama Stitch, with its easy, accurate guide for framing shots to combine in the included Picture Project software.

In use, the P5000 proved far less frustrating than the typical compact. It's nice in the hand, and the shutter button is well positioned. While the AF sometimes take a moment to hunt, once it locks on, the camera fires with no delay. You can move the focusing point to a nutty 99 different positions, and couple the spotmeter to any one of them.

Missing? Adobe RGB color space and RAW capture. And the viewfinder is one of those low-magnification squintfinders.

But keep the ISOs down, and you can pack nearly the picture-taking power of a D40x in a shirt pocket.


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