Nikon Coolpix L4

The good:

  • Simple to use
  • Decent images
  • Inexpensive

The bad:

  • Sluggish performance
  • No manual ISO setting
  • Noticeable purple fringing
  • Sub par movie mode

The bottomline:

The Nikon Coolpix L4 produces solid pictures for a budget camera.

Editors' rating:

6.2/10

Users' rating:

8/10

The Nikon Coolpix L4 is the least expensive of Nikon's low-end L-series line of digital cameras. The L4 has a small, 4-megapixel sensor, a 3X optical zoom lens, and a handful of scene preset modes but few high-end settings. Though slow and not very versatile, it puts out some pretty good pictures for its price.

The L4's silver-plastic body is compact, light and fairly stylish for such a low-end camera. At less than 35mm thick, the L4 is a little bit too fat to slip into your jeans, but it weighs just 115 grams (without SD card and batteries), making it comfortable to carry in a jacket or purse.

Controls are simple and direct, though the recessed buttons might make thicker-fingered users feel awkward. The top side of the camera holds a large, round shutter-release button and a smaller, rectangular power button. The power button isn't as responsive as we would have liked, and it needs to be held down for a few seconds to start up the camera.

The back panel holds the rest of the camera's controls. A small zoom rocker; a mode slider for switching between automatic, scene-assist, and movie modes; a four-way-plus-OK control pad; and menu, review, and trash buttons sit next to the L4's two-inch LCD. The control pad can navigate the camera's menu system as well as directly access the flash, timer, and macro modes.

Like most low-end, budget digital cameras, the Nikon Coolpix L4 is a bit light on the features. ISO sensitivity is set automatically, although white balance and exposure compensation give some degree of control. An ample assortment of 15 scene presets help make up for the meagre manual controls by configuring the camera to shoot under special situations, such as inside a museum or against a backlight. While the camera has a 640x480 movie mode, it shoots at only 15fps and doesn't record sound. For a fully functional movie mode, try the L4's bigger brother, the Nikon Coolpix L3, which shoots VGA movies at 30fps with sound. The L4 doesn't have an image stabilisation mode, though it does detect possibly blurry photos as you take them based on a number of camera settings, such as shutter speed, and prompts you to save or delete the questionable image.

Performance
Performance was a bit sluggish, but in good lighting, the L4 is still quite usable. After an irritating 4.5 seconds to start up and capture its first image, the L4 can snap off an image every 2.9 seconds. With the onboard flash enabled, the rate slows to 4.4 seconds. Shutter lag is a decent 0.9 second in adequate lighting but a disappointing two seconds under dim light.

Image Quality
Images from the Coolpix L4 reproduced colours faithfully but still suffered from some irksome issues. We noticed distinct purple fringing along high-contrast edges, and some finer details were softened in post-processing. Despite these flaws, our images generally turned out clear and noise-free.

The Nikon Coolpix L4 isn't the quickest or most versatile camera out there, but its solid images and tiny price tag make it a good choice for budget-minded photographers who don't need too many options.

Like this article? Click below to send it to your mobile for free!

Kim
05/07/2008, 04:21 PM

rating
8
/10

Nikon coolpix l4 has great digtal photography results. I like its stylish

attrative design body. Its body looks like a casio gv-20

camera. Nikon has hard body. Its very heavy duty camera. Its lens performance is cool. Its cheap and handy camera.

Pros: Solid image quality.
Raw capture.
Attractive design.
Excellent video specs.
Zippy performance.

Cons: Small LCD.

Report offensive comment

KESAVAN.S
19/01/2008, 03:50 PM

rating
8
/10

Good Pictures

Pros: Good Pictures

Cons: Good PicturesGood Pictures

Report offensive comment

  • Leave a comment

All fields marked with * are required

What do you think

Rate this product:

Need help? Read our guidelines for what each number rating represents.

Your e-mail will not be displayed

You must read and type the 6 chars within 0..9 and A..F

You must read and type the 6 chars.

  • Microsoft gets a better answer to Flickr

  • Olympus E-30

  • 14.7-megapixel face-off: Canon's 980 IS vs. Samsung's NV100HD

  • Canon IXUS 980 IS

  • Nikon D3X

  • Exposure: Gerry Pearce

  • You speak and ShutterVoice listens

  • Photoshop supports 5D Mark II, camera profiles

  • DxO sheds light on camera sensor performance

More articles »

Find the right digital camera

Brand
  • Multiple options can be selected

    Membership benefits

    Create wishlists

    Create wishlists

    See a product on CNET Australia that you want? Add it to your wishlist and send a hint to your friends and family. Sign up for a free CNET Australia membership now!