

Also See: Camera Test Nikon V1 ILC
With ILCs from Panasonic, Olympus, Samsung, and Sony getting lots of attention, it was only a matter of time before one of the Big Two, Canon and Nikon, got in the interchangeable-lens compact game. Nikon has jumped in first with its Nikon 1 system.
So far comprised of two bodies and four lenses, the system uses sensors that are smaller in size than those found in Micro Four Thirds cameras. Nikon has dubbed this new sensor size the CX format, and the Nikon J1 ($650, street, with 10–30mm f/3.5–5.6 VR lens) is the first of this format to be tested in the Popular Photography Test Lab. What we found came as a bit of a surprise.
In the Test Lab
At 13.2x8.8mm, CX format sensors have a 2.7X lens factor (making that kit lens a 27–81mm full-frame equivalent). CX sensors have a little more than half the surface area of Four Thirds sensors, about a third that of APS-C sized sensors, and less than one-seventh that of a full-frame sensor. That leaves significantly less room for pixels in the J1 compared with the Sony NEX-7.
Nikon opted to keep the pixel count low—10.1MP—a strategy that led to pretty good performance in our noise tests; noise remained at a Low or better rating from ISO 100 to ISO 800.
The J1 scored an overall image quality rating of Very High in our tests at ISO 100 and ISO 200. The camera’s resolution proved to be the limiting factor keeping it from a higher rating. At its bottom two sensitivity settings, the J1 turned in 2025 lines per picture height in RAW images converted to 16-bit TIFFs. At both ISO 400 and 800, a drop in resolution below 2000 lines knocked the J1’s image quality down to a High rating. At higher ISOs, noise brought the overall image quality rating down further.
In our color accuracy test, the J1 achieved an Excellent rating with an average Delta E of 7.0.
The small CX sensor clearly limits image quality—if the pixel count were higher, it would likely have adverse affects on the noise.
In the Field
Possibly the biggest thing that the J1 has going for it is good looks. The white sample we got for testing is gorgeous, with a smooth finish that has a luxurious texture, and at the same time feels relatively secure in the hand. There’s no real grip to speak of, but given that it’s intended for people stepping up from compacts, they might not miss it.
Like Olympus’s Pen kit lenses, the 10–30mm kit lens for the J1 (and its sibling, the V1) can be retracted into the short lens barrel when not in use. Out of the box, the act of opening the lens will turn the camera on.
There aren’t all that many buttons on the J1, though the function button can be programmed to control a handful of different settings. The lever next to the function button is used to change the majority of settings, such as aperture or shutter speed in priority shooting modes. It felt mushy, and wasn’t always reliable—occasionally, when we were trying to change aperture, it took two or three presses to make it happen.
Overall, the J1 has an amateurish feel to it, with program, manual, and aperture- and shutter-priority buried in menus rather than getting their own spots on the mode dial. Instead, you’ll find gimmicky things such as Nikon’s Smart Photo Selector and Motion Snapshot. The former captures up to 20 images in a burst and selects five of the best to keep based on sharpness, composition, and whether your subjects are smiling or blinking. Motion Snapshot captures a 2-second slow-motion video clip with a still image at the end. Cute, but not all that useful.