Features
Handling
Performance
Verdict
Specification
The Nikon 1 J1 is the most compact camera from the new Nikon 1 series, and features a completely new lens mount, completely new sensor design, and new Nikkor 1 series lenses. Now that full production cameras have been made available lets see how the more compact and stylish J1 performs. With 60fps shooting at full resolution, and claims of the World's fastest focus, the camera certainly offer something unique, find out how it performs in our review.
Nikon 1 J1 Features
Nikon 1 J1 Silver
The Nikon 1 J1 is the entry level mirrorless camera from Nikon, with a lower resolution screen (460k vs 921k), and smaller buffer setting it apart from the V1, it's also available in five different colours: White, Black, Red, Silver and Pink. For more details on the differences between the two new cameras have a look at our Nikon 1 V1 vs Nikon 1 J1 comparison.
Key Features
- 10.1 megapixel CMOS sensor - CX format, 2.7x crop
- 3inch 460k dot screen
- Full HD video, 1080p, Stereo sound
- ISO100-3200 (expandable to ISO6400)
- World's fastest autofocus system
- Focal plane phase-detection AF + Contrast-detect AF
- 10fps continuous shooting, with AF tracking
- 60fps full resolution shooting (Single AF)
Nikon 1 J1 Silver Top
Nikon 1 J1 Handling
Handling - With a curved design, the Nikon 1 J1 looks similar to the Leica X1, and features a rubber grip on the back, and a smooth surface at the front. There are a good number of buttons, with a mode dial on the back, although the mode dial is quite limited giving the choice of motion snapshot, smart shot selector, normal photo, and video mode. The controls on the J1 and the V1 (apart from the EVF on the V1) are pretty much identical. The camera has an electronic shutter and the shutter sound effect can be switched off for completely silent shooting. The J1 has a built in pop-up flash that raises the flash about 1 inch above the camera. The camera lacks dust reduction, instead relying on the infra-red filter (shown above) protecting the sensor from dust, it's also much further forward, so that any dust should be less visible in photos. The collapsible lenses have a clever feature built in, if you press the button and twist the lens to unlock it when the camera is off, the camera will automatically switch on, because presumably the only reason you'd be unlocking the lens is so you can take photos. Clever.
Nikon 1 J1 Silver Back
Photo menu | Setup menu |
Menus - There are three main sections, playback, photo, and setup. When the photo mode is selected with the dial on the back, you can then change the exposure mode in the menus to choose between: Scene auto selector, Programmed auto, Shutter-priority auto, Aperture-priority auto, and full Manual. The scroll wheel is used to scroll through the menu options, although it's quite sensitive and sometimes it will scroll through a little too quickly. The F (Function) button on the back will let you choose the shutter mode from electronic, and electronic (Hi), with the last option being used for high speed continuous shooting. In the video mode it lets you choose between HD and slow motion video.
Nikon 1 J1 Silver Battery
Battery Life - Battery life is rated at 230 shots according to CIPA standards, unfortunately the J1 doesn't show you detailed battery life information like the V1. We managed to take over 300 photos and there were still two bars of battery life showing on screen, which is better than expected considering the CIPA rating.
Speed - With 135 focus areas (Single-point AF) and Auto-area AF with 41 focus areas the focusing system on the Nikon 1 J1 should be very responsive, and gives excellent control over what you are focusing on letting you choose any position from the 135 focus areas. We took a number of shots to test the camera's responsiveness, from switch on to first photo, shot to shot, focusing speed etc. We take a number of shots and then use the average to ensure accurate and consistent tests, making it easy to compare with other cameras. We have shown the Panasonic Lumix GF3 here as a comparison.
Nikon J1 | Panasonic GF3 | |
Shutter Response | <0.05 | <0.05 |
Wide - Focus / Shutter Response | 0.2* | 0.2*** |
Full zoom - Focus / Shutter Response | 0.25** | 0.2*** |
Switch on Time to Taking a Photo | 1.5 / 1.2 (10mm) | 0.9 |
Shot to Shot without Flash | 1.2 | 0.6 |
Shot to Shot with Flash | 1.7 | 1.3 |
Continuous Shooting (shots before slow down) |
10 (13) 30 (12) 60fps (12) |
4fps (13 shots) |
Continuous Shooting - Flash | N/A | N/A |
Continuous Shooting - RAW | 10 (13) 30 (12) 60fps (12) |
4fps (6 shots) |
* 10mm, 10-30mm / 30-110mm lens (wide), ** 10-30mm / 30-110mm lens (telephoto) *** GF3 tested with 14-42mm Olympus Mk II R
Continuous shooting is as fast as advertised, shooting at 10, 30 or 60fps using electronic shutter (Hi speed), and you can take up to 13 shots at 10fps, and 12 shots at 30 or 60fps. Shutter response is excellent, and focusing is very quick matching the Panasonic Lumix GF3 (and PEN Mini), but seemed slightly slower at the telephoto end of the zoom lens. Switch on time is better with the 10mm lens and is reasonably quick. Shot to shot time is a little slower than expected and there doesn't seem to be any way to switch off reviewing the photo after taking it. These high speed shooting options are available whether shooting JPEG, RAW or JPEG+RAW.
Nikon 1 J1 Performance
Here are several sample photos taken in a variety of lighting conditions, click "Hi-Res" to view full size sample photos, there are more sample photos in the equipment database where you can also add your own photos:
Nikon 1 J1 Sample Photos
The photos show excellent skin tones, lots of detail and just a slight hint of red-eye. Colour is very good, with saturated reds and blues, without being overly saturated. The motion snap shot mode takes a photo and a slow motion video, the example video can be found here.
Nikon 1 J1 Lens test images
The lenses perform really well in a variety of conditions, with perhaps the 10mm pancake lens standing out as the star lens of the three tested. Vignetting is not noticeable, although partial vignetting was spotted on one shot with the 30-110mm telephoto lens at full zoom (110mm).
There is some barrel distortion at wide-angle (10mm) on the 10-30mm lens, some on the 10mm pancake lens, and some at wide (30mm) on the 30-110mm lens but it is not excessive. Some pincushion distortion is visible at telephoto on the 10-30mm, and 30-110mm lens. The distortion is barely noticeable in real world shots.
Some purple fringing is visible on all lenses, the 10mm, 10-30mm and 30-110mm in areas of high contrast. There is very little chromatic aberration noticed. Ghosting / Flare - the lenses coped very well shooting into the sun or with the sun just out of frame.
Detail in corners seemed slightly worse with the 10-30mm lens at 10mm compared to the 10mm pancake lens, and when the 10mm pancake lens is stopped down to around f/5.0 detail is excellent. The 10-30mm lens gave the best macro performance when used on the telephoto setting, and in comparison the 10mm and the 30-110mm lenses could not get as close to the subject.
Nikon 1 J1 Other sample images
These photos show the camera's ability to cope with bright skies, shooting into the sun, and shadows. The sky on some of these pictures has lost detail in the clouds, and the brightest areas of the image. However if you look at the RAW files a lot of additional detail can be recovered. These were all shot with the 10mm pancake lens.
Nikon 1 J1 ISO test images
ISO Noise performance: Low noise at ISO100/200, with some noise becoming more noticeable as the ISO setting increases to ISO400 and ISO800. It's at ISO1600 that coloured noise becomes more noticeable, but results are still good up to ISO1600. At ISO3200 noise is beginning to be quite noticeable, and it begins to distract from the image. ISO6400 shows softer than expected results, with black and white dots, although colours are still strongly saturated.
Compared to the 10 megapixel Nikon Coolpix P7100 at ISO400 the P7100 is showing more coloured noise compared to the V1, and at ISO800 the P7100 is applying much stronger noise reduction to reduce the coloured (chroma) noise. As the ISO setting increases the image quality of the P7100 continues to degrade with increased colour loss, while the V1 images still appear detailed and colourful in comparison. The V1 still produces usable images at ISO3200 with very little colour loss, while the P7100 doesn't really, and images should be resized. ISO6400 is very soft on both cameras, but the V1 shows much more colour (in the coloured squares) while the P7100 has strong colour loss.
Nikon 1 J1 White-balance test images
Auto white balance: The camera produces very good results particularly using auto white balance, with very little difference between auto white balance and the tungsten preset. Under fluorescent lighting better results were obtained when using auto white balance, with the fluorescent preset giving a slight magenta cast. Some signs of moire are visible in the fabric pattern in the case in the middle of the picture, and detail is very good for a 10 megapixel sensor.
The camera doesn't feature a panoramic mode or any "digital filters" or effects, and the scene modes can't be manually selected, instead there is just auto scene mode selection or P/A/S/M modes. To enhance dynamic range, the camera has the option to switch on D-Lighting, this adjusts the shadows to bring out more detail in them.
Nikon 1 J1 Digital filters
Smart Photo Selector (SPS): Flash is not available, so ideally you would need good light for this, although the camera will increase the ISO setting when needed. The camera takes 30 photos at 30fps and then presents the 5 best photos, with one of the photos highlighted as the best overall, all 5 photos are saved to the memory card as JPEG or RAW if selected.
The Motion Snapshot or "Living Picture" as Nikon like to call it, takes 1 photo, and 1 slow motion video - (1 second long) and then when played back on the camera it plays the video then shows the photo with one of four pieces of music (chosen pre-shooting). The files are saved on the memory card as an 8.2 megapixel JPEG (3840x2160), and as a separate 1080/24fps MOV video file, both files have the same name, both starting with NMS and the JPEG ending in .JPEG, and the video file ending in .MOV. An example of the photo is shown above, and the video can be seen here. Flash is not available.
Video: Video is recorded at 1080/60i, 1080/30p, 720/60p, with stereo sound, video sound options are: auto sensitivity, high, medium, low, and off with the option of wind noise reduction on or off. Fade in/out black or white is available. Slow motion options are: 400fps (640x240) or 1200fps (320x240) the later mode needs better than indoor lighting. Both of the slow motion video modes can only record 5 seconds, and examples of all of these video modes are available on the ePHOTOzine Youtube page.
Lenses available:
The lenses are all optimised / designed for both still image quality and video recording with quiet auto-focus and motors in the power zoom models, and white balance is optimised for each lens. The first three zoom lenses are all retractable / collapsible making them more compact when not in use.
10mm f/2.8 pancake lens - 27mm equivalent.
10-30mm f/3.5-5.6 VR - 27-81mm equivalent "Standard" zoom.
30-110mm f/3.8-5.6 VR - 81-297mm equivalent telephoto zoom.
10-100mm f/4.5-5.6 VR - 27-270mm equivalent power zoom.
A Nikon FT1 adapter is available for Nikon lenses - and with AF-S / AF-I lenses Auto Focus will work. With a 2.7x crop factor, a 35mm standard lens will become a 94.5mm equivalent lens, and this crop factor would suit telephoto lenses particularly if you're interested in having as much zoom as possible. Another way of looking at this is to think of the Nikon 50mm f/1.8 D lens, which is available for around £90, would become a 135mm f/1.8 telephoto lens, which means getting a bright telephoto lens would be very cheap looking at the price of the lens on its own.
Future lenses are already under development with 7 prototypes being shown including a number of thin zooms, portrait, and macro lenses, for details have a look at the future lenses and prototypes here. It will be interesting to find out the specifications of these lenses when they are officially announced.
Value For Money
Available from the 20th October 2011, with a price of £549 with kit lens, the Nikon 1 J1 already undercuts some of the other compact mirrorless cameras, and is priced in the middle of the rest of the cameras. This makes it competitive at launch, priced very similarly to the RRP of the Olympus PEN Lite E-PL3, and Panasonic Lumix G3. For alternatives have a look at ePHOTOzine's Top 11 Mirrorless cameras.
Nikon 1 J1 Verdict
The Nikon 1 J1 is the more compact, and more stylish looking camera from the Nikon 1 series available in five different colours, with matching lens colours. With a smaller sensor than the Micro Four thirds system, it allows smaller lenses, and the 10 megapixel sensor achieves an amazing 60fps shooting, high speed video and full HD recording. Nikon has used the high speed sensor to develop "Motion snapshot", a combination of video and a photo, as well as Smart Photo Selector that chooses the best 5 photos from 30 taken at 30fps.
Continuous shooting is excellent: 60fps at full resolution is generally unheard of except in high end video. Although it seems a shame that there is not the option to use the high speed shooting for other things, such as auto exposure bracketing, auto-HDR (instead just Active D-Lighting), and auto-panoramic modes, options strangely missing from the camera.
The lens line up is lacking in bright aperture lenses, and it will be good to see if the future lenses address this. The camera features hybrid AF, with contrast and phase detection built into the sensor, and provides extremely fast focusing, although perhaps focusing isn't always as quick as intended, with the Panasonic GF3 / Olympus PEN Mini focusing more quickly at times.
Image quality is very good, with great colour, and detail, and while ISO noise is not as impressive as Micro Four Thirds cameras, it is noticeably better than serious compacts, such as the Nikon Coolpix P7100, particularly at higher ISO settings.
The price of the J1 is quite reasonable, putting it in the middle of the mirrorless price range, yet the 60fps shooting is a unique feature that is worth paying for. However the consumer orientated features (lack of AEB, Manual controls on the mode dial, etc) could be a disappointment to some.
The Nikon 1 J1 delivers one of the more compact mirrorless camera systems available, thanks to the compact kits lenses available so far being very compact thanks to the pancake design and collapsible zooms. The Nikon 1 J1 has a solid, stylish metal body, and will even fit in baggy trouser pockets, with the lens on!
The Nikon 1 J1 offers great image quality and extremely rapid continuous shooting and fast focusing in a compact stylish body.