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Though the S9's manual says that the camera can capture up to 5 frames at a time in its standard burst mode, we found that as long as you hold the shutter button, the camera keeps capturing images, although the speed slows down after the first five images. (This is probably because the camera must wait for the buffer to clear enough room to capture the next image.) Nikon quotes a speed of 1.7 frames per second based on its stated five frames. We were able to capture 42 VGA-sized images in 32.8 seconds, for an average of about 1.28 frames per second, and 42 highest-quality 6-megapixel images in 34.8 seconds, for an average of about 1.21 frames per second.

The Coolpix S9 produced pleasing images with accurate-looking and adequately saturated colors, though the images weren't quite as sharp as we've seen from some other ultracompacts, such as Sony's T series. We saw small amounts of barrel distortion at the lens' widest setting and even smaller amounts of pincushion distortion at its longest telephoto setting, though you'll likely not see it in your photos unless you're shooting an object with lots of straight lines--for example,a modern high-rise building with lots of glass windows. The automatic white balance served up very slightly warm images with our lab's tungsten lights, though still well within the usable range; some might even like the warm effect. The tungsten preset was more neutral, but had a minor greenish cast. The manual, or Preset, white balance we created gave us the most neutral results.

Strangely, Nikon includes only center-weighted, rather than matrix, metering in the S9. In our tests, it seemed to weigh the very center of the image more heavily than some similar metering systems we've seen. When we tested the camera's ability to balance fill flash, the S9 struggled when the lamp in our test scene was turned to the highest of its three brightness settings, and it didn't provide enough flash to illuminate the entire scene. When we lowered the lamp to its lowest setting, the camera did better, making us think that it gave too much weight to the object in the center of our image, which caught just enough light from the lamp to confuse a metering system that apparently doesn't take into account a large portion of a scene.

Nikon manages to keep noise under control throughout the S9's sensitivity range, but we noted that the camera's sensitivity maxes out at ISO 400, which is far below what you'll find in a lot of ultracompact cameras. At very least, we'd have expected the camera to reach ISO 800, though ISO 1,600 would've been better if Nikon wants to remain competitive. At its lowest setting of ISO 64, we saw very little noise, which likely won't be noticeable in prints, though you'll probably notice it when viewing on a monitor. At ISO 100, noise grew slightly. By ISO 200, noise was very noticeable on monitors. Though Nikon's noise-reduction algorithms help minimize noise in prints, they also rob much of an image's finer detail. ISO 400 showed plenty of noise, though again, not-so-detailed prints should be OK at smaller sizes. In addition to sacrificing finer details at this highest setting, darker portions of our images, such as the face of a plush ape in our test scene, plunged even deeper into darkness, obscuring detail in shadows as well as smoothing the noise reduction.

Overall, Nikon's Coolpix S9 is a decent ultracompact, but its lack of high ISO or image stabilization, as well as substandard noise performance make us think twice. If you're looking for a snapshot camera, you may be better served with something such as Canon's SD600 or SD630. Or, perhaps take a step up to Nikon's Coolpix S7c. Sony's T-series cameras, such as the Cyber Shot DSC-T9, have also done well in our tests, but tend to be a bit pricey compared to this Nikon.

Shooting speed
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Typical shot-to-shot time  
Time to first shot  
Shutter lag (typical)  
Olympus FE-120
2.6 
4.9 
1.3 
Pentax Optio A10
4.2 
3.8 
0.8 
Nikon Coolpix S7c
2.1 
2.2 
0.7 
Nikon Coolpix S9
2.7 
2.6 
0.7 
Casio Exilim EX-Z850
2.7 
2.1 
0.5 
Sony Cyber Shot DSC-T9
1.3 
1.7 
0.3 
Note: Seconds

Typical continuous-shooting speed
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Note: Frames per second
See more CNET content tagged:
Nikon Corp.,
Nikon Coolpix,
shutter,
LCD screen,
camera

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Reviews from around the Web

  • photographypress.co.uk

    Summary: The gently swooping curve of the camera's faceplate and the neat, internal, vertical travel zoom lens complete an extremely attractive package

    Read full review

  • techtree.com

    Editors' rating: 50

    Read full review

  • pocket-lint.co.uk

    Editors' rating: 80

    Summary: The gently swooping curve of the camera's faceplate and the neat, internal, vertical travel zoom lens complete an extremely attractive package.

    Read full review

  • personal computer world

    Editors' rating: 80

    Summary: A chic little camera with features that help you take better photos with minimal photographic skills

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  • imaging-resource.com

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