Nikon COOLPIX S3600 review
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Written by Ken McMahon
Quality
Nikon COOLPIX S3600 vs Sony W830 JPEG
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Nikon COOLPIX S3600 | Sony Cyber-shot W830 | |
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f3.7, 80 ISO | f3.3, 80 ISO | |
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f3.7, 80 ISO | f3.3, 80 ISO | |
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f3.7, 80 ISO | f3.3, 80 ISO | |
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f3.7, 80 ISO | f3.3, 80 ISO |
COOLPIX S3600 vs Sony W830 JPEG noise
![]() To compare noise levels under real-life conditions, I shot this scene with the Nikon COOLPIX S3600 and the Sony Cyber-shot W830 within a few moments of each other using their best quality JPEG settings at each of their ISO sensitivity settings. Both lenses were set to their maximum 25mm wide angle focal length and the cameras were set to Program Auto exposure mode. The above shot was taken with the COOLPIX S3600 in Program auto mode. For these tests both cameras were placed on a tripod, stabilisation was disabled on the COOLPIX S3600 but can’t be disabled on the Cyber-shot W830. However, you can turn off Dynamic Range Optimisation on the W830 so I disabled it as it can exaggerate noise. With the sensitivity set to its base 80 ISO the COOLPIX S3600 metered an exposure of 1s at f3.7. The W830, also set to 80 ISO selected 0.6s at f3.3. As we saw in the outdoor test crops, the base 80 ISO setting on the COOLPIX S3600 is quite noisy. There’s a speckly texture over the entire crop area which is obscuring the finer detail and breaking up the edges. I think there’s also evidence of JPEG compression artifacts in this crop which isn’t helping matters. The good news is that the 100 ISO crop doesn’t look a lot worse, if anything I’d say it was a slight improvement in some areas. Though there looks to be a little more noise texture on the left of the crop the text on the hymn board is just as clear. The 100 ISO crop also looks slightly more contrasty. At 200 ISO the crop is a little grainier, but I’d have no hesitation in using these three settings more or less interchangeably. Though the noise gets significantly worse at 400 ISO and the crop looks a bit softer, this is a fairly respectable result that looks good at close to 100 percent viewing sizes. At 800 ISO, though, things take a steep downward turn in terms of quality with clumpy grain and softness combining to eat away at the image detail. And though it looks ok at smaller sizes, the 1600 ISO setting is probably best avoided for all but those must have shots. The COOLPIX S3600 has a 3200 ISO setting that operates at reduced 4M resolution, so the crop shows a much larger area. The quality isn’t bad and if you can live with the smaller size it’s well worth having. Judging by the 1600 ISO crop, it certainly makes a lot more sense than a full resoution 3200 ISO setting would. Compared with the crops from the Sony W830 the COOLPIX S3600 crops look noisier and less detailed, at least at the lower end of the sensitivity range. At 80, 100 and 200 ISO the W830 crops are cleaner, with less noise and more detail. At 400 ISO and beyond, though, there’s not much to choose between them. The Sony W830 has the advantage, if that’s the word, of a full resolution 3200 ISO setting, but, as you can see, there’s so much noise you really can’t see very much image detail. Now head over to my COOLPIX S3600 sample images to see some more real-life shots in a variety of conditions or head straight for my COOLPIX S3600 verdict.
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