Canon PowerShot SX120 IS
Starting at: $138.00
CNET Editors' Review
CNET Editors' Rating
- Reviewed by: Joshua Goldman
- Released on:
- Reviewed on:
The good: Easy to use; best-in-class photo quality; manual and semimanual controls.
The bad: Fewer features, slower performance, and bulkier design than competitive models.
The bottom line: Canon's SX120 IS pocket megazoom falls behind the competition in every aspect except photo quality.
Canon seems to have an "if it ain't broke" attitude when it comes to its PowerShot SX series. The SX120 IS is the latest version of the company's 10x pocket megazoom and is nearly identical to its predecessors, the SX110 IS and SX100 IS. The SX120 IS gets a resolution bump--it's now 10-megapixels--and uses Canon's Digic 4 image processor, which along with enhanced battery life adds advanced face and motion detection features and improved red-eye correction. It's not much of a step forward, just offering a little bit of new technology for the price of ... Expand full review
Canon seems to have an "if it ain't broke" attitude when it comes to its PowerShot SX series. The SX120 IS is the latest version of the company's 10x pocket megazoom and is nearly identical to its predecessors, the SX110 IS and SX100 IS. The SX120 IS gets a resolution bump--it's now 10-megapixels--and uses Canon's Digic 4 image processor, which along with enhanced battery life adds advanced face and motion detection features and improved red-eye correction. It's not much of a step forward, just offering a little bit of new technology for the price of 2008's SX110 IS. You also get the same excellent photo quality, which is nice, but ever-so-slightly slower performance, which is less nice.
| Key specs | Canon PowerShot SX120 IS |
| Price (MSRP) | $249.99 |
| Dimensions (WHD) | 4.4 x 2.8 x 1.8 inches |
| Weight (with battery and media) | 10.4 ounces |
| Megapixels, image sensor size, type | 10 megapixels, 1/2.3-inch CCD |
| LCD size, resolution/viewfinder | 3-inch LCD, 230K dots/None |
| Lens (zoom, aperture, focal length) | 10x, 10x f2.8-4.3 36-360mm (35mm equivalent) |
| File format (still/video) | JPEG/Motion JPEG (.AVI) |
| Highest resolution size (still/video) | 3,648x2,736 pixels/ 640x480 at 30fps |
| Image stabilization type | Optical and digital |
| Battery type, rated life | AA (2, alkaline included), 130 shots |
Though it's bulkier than similarly featured models from Panasonic and Kodak, the SX120 IS will fit comfortably into a jacket pocket or uncomfortably in a jeans pocket. It's not lightweight either; the optically stabilized 10x zoom lens and two AA-size batteries are responsible for most of its 10.4-ounce weight. The SX120 IS is large enough that it should be easy to hold securely, and despite the body being slippery, the right-hand grip seems improved (but that may be all in my head). Encased in plastic, the SX120 IS nevertheless feels quite solid and sturdy. A door on the bottom covers an SDHC card slot and battery compartment. Unlike many AA-powered megazooms that use four batteries, the SX120 IS is powered by two, and battery life feels relatively short. You'll want to pick up some rechargeable NiMH batteries, which will triple the shot count from alkaline.
The controls on the back are pretty much the same as those on the SX110 IS. Face detection, display, menu, and exposure compensation buttons are above and below the navigational scroll wheel to the right of the 3-inch LCD. The wheel surrounds a Func./Set button and has top, bottom, left, and right pressure points for ISO sensitivity, focus (manual, normal, and macro), flash, and timer. The wheel is a touch too responsive, but it's only a real problem in Special Scene mode as it's always activated for either changing scene types or exposure compensation. The PictBridge button that was relegated to the far left corner above the screen is gone, while a playback button sits between the right side of the LCD and the slight indent of a thumb rest.
| General shooting options | Canon PowerShot SX120 IS |
| ISO sensitivity (full resolution) | Auto, 80, 100, 200, 400, 800, 1,600 |
| White balance | Auto, Daylight, Cloudy, Tungsten, Fluorescent, Fluorescent H, Custom |
| Recording modes | Easy, Smart Auto, Program, Aperture priority, Shutter priority, Manual, Portrait, Landscape, Special Scene, Indoor, Kids & Pets, Night Snapshot, Movie |
| Focus mode | Normal AF, Face Detection AF, Macro, Manual, |
| Metering | Evaluative, Center-weighted average, Spot |
| Color effects | Vivid, Neutral, Sepia, Black & White, Custom |
| Burst mode shot limit (full resolution) | Unlimited continuous |
For the SX120 IS, Canon throws the more common scene-shooting modes (Portrait, Landscape, Night Snapshot, Indoor, and Kids & Pets) on the actual Mode dial and keeps more specialized scene types (Sunset, Snow, Fireworks, Foliage, Aquarium, Beach, and ISO 3200) under an SCN spot on the dial. Also crammed onto the Mode dial is a full complement of manual and semimanual exposure modes; Canon's Smart Auto option that picks an appropriate scene type based on the camera's analysis of faces, brightness, colors, distance, and movement; and an Easy mode for fully automatic shooting with no access to menus whatsoever. There is a Movie mode on there, too, but it maxes out at VGA-quality without use of the optical zoom while recording and only mono sound. That's just sad.
Though the SX120 IS gets decent marks overall for speed, it does have some borderline performance issues that earned it some ratings demerits. It wakes and shoots in 2.5 seconds, which is typical of megazooms. Its shutter lag for high- and low-contrast scenes--0.6 second and 0.7 second, respectively--are typical for this class, too. However, shot-to-shot times are noticeably slow at 2.6 seconds without flash and jump to 6.1 seconds once you enable the flash. Continuous shooting is unimpressive, too, running at 0.8 frames per second.
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Josh started writing about consumer tech more than a decade ago covering everything from software and computers to home theater and audio equipment. He currently covers digital cameras and camcorders for CNET, but occasionally spouts off about other things like laptops, tablets, apps, and anything to do with listening to music.
User Reviews
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Most Helpful User Review
stars 8 of 8 users found this review helpful
"Surprisingly Better than Great Point & Shoot" By irocjbl
Pros Full manual control. Excellent Auto shoot mode. Wonderful flash photo work. Big Bright 3" Display screen. Excellent Base ISO Photos with the flash indoors.
Cons No HD Video.
Summary I bought this camera for my wife thinking it was going to be a normal point and shoot average photos but I was wrong. I used it indoors at night at first and was totally surprised with the image quality. The flash did not over expose the image like other ... Expand full review
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Specifications
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- Product Type: Digital camera - Compact
- Resolution: 10 megapixels
- Digital video input format: AVI MJPEG
