"Nikon’s target audience for the P1100 is bird watchers. To support them, the company included a selectable AF-area mode in the Bird Watching Mode where the same functions that can be assigned to the camera’s Fn button can now be assigned to the Fn1/Fn2 buttons on the optional ML-L7 Remote Control." - from Petapixel
Sounds all very nice, but I can't help myself ... poxy sensors like this 1/2.3" (6.17 x 4.55 mm = 28.07 mm^2) ... they're just crap, no matter how you spin it. From 1" (13.2 x 8.8 mm = 116 mm^2) upwards things get interesting.
When you think the number of photos being printed at A3, or hung up on the wall versus those just posted on the internet must be 1 in 100000s, it probably makes sense to go with smaller sensors for the majority of products.I am quite aware of what the crop factor does, having been an avid wildlife and nature photographer since about 1983. However, the image quality returned by such miniscule sensors is dismal as soon as you move up to printable sizes, such as A3 or above. For folks only looking at pix on a (phone) monitor, they are plenty big enough. Folks still living in real houses, not piled-up rabbit hutches, with real pictures on the wall, such images are useless, even if marketing tells you otherwise. I am aware that my mileage varies.
I bought the Nikon P900 as I found the P1000 too unwieldy. When the P950 replaced the P900 I decided it wasn't enough of an upgrade to merit trading in my old camera. I'm not tempted by the P1100 either but I'm curious if the technically informed could tell me whether a lens like the P1000/1100's could (theoretically at least) be paired with a 1" sensor and with what result in terms of zoom range."Nikon’s target audience for the P1100 is bird watchers. To support them, the company included a selectable AF-area mode in the Bird Watching Mode where the same functions that can be assigned to the camera’s Fn button can now be assigned to the Fn1/Fn2 buttons on the optional ML-L7 Remote Control." - from Petapixel
Sounds all very nice, but I can't help myself ... poxy sensors like this 1/2.3" (6.17 x 4.55 mm = 28.07 mm^2) ... they're just crap, no matter how you spin it. From 1" (13.2 x 8.8 mm = 116 mm^2) upwards things get interesting.
I bought the Nikon P900 as I found the P1000 too unwieldy. When the P950 replaced the P900 I decided it wasn't enough of an upgrade to merit trading in my old camera. I'm not tempted by the P1100 either but I'm curious if the technically informed could tell me whether a lens like the P1000/1100's could (theoretically at least) be paired with a 1" sensor and with what result in terms of zoom range.
Thanks. I could cope with the beast if it had those specs (or a tad less reach if it made it appreciably smaller) particularly if it came with the sophisticated bird focus modes some cameras now sport. It's a shame there aren't more big zoom cameras with a 1" sensor.In the region of a 12-1465mm full frame equivalent, I think, comparing it to my RX10 iv. Can't see why it couldn't be done, though probably worth not making it quite so wide at the short end of the zoom.
This highlights something that I think all camera manufacturers have been getting away with for too long, whether Nikon, Canon, Panasonic, or anyone else.In the region of a 12-1465mm full frame equivalent, I think, comparing it to my RX10 iv. Can't see why it couldn't be done, though probably worth not making it quite so wide at the short end of the zoom.
Thank you for that Niels, I was simply quoting the figures used in the earlier post, although I did raise an eyebrow at the '12mm' wide end - that's super-wideness should have raised an alarm, but dinner was cooking and I didn't have time to open the spec. 60X as you say is twice the 30x I used, but it still does not give a clear description of how powerful the camera is in comparison with another model with a different wide angle length to it.While most of your arguments make sense, the FF equivalent range you quote was for a hypothetical camera in which the sensor had been replaced with a 1-inch sensor. Nikon writes that the p1100 has a zoom range from 24 to 3000 mm equivalent. With your calculations, that would be about 60x magnification relative to the standard 50mm lens.
Niels
For the average birder who wants to take an ID shot of a small bird camera like the newly announced P1100 from Nikon are ideal. Most do not want to haul around a FX camera with a 5 lb lens in the field.
That's exactly how it is. Birdwatchers use a P1100 for identification and for private photo albums and rarely for large-format canvas prints. The priority is good binoculars and spotting scopes. Most of those who want super image quality do digiscoping. The fun is much cheaper than a fast 600mm lens.A bridge camera with a 1/2.3 is light, compact, inexpensive, and takes shots good enough for identification and records. Forum members get quite nice shots with them.
Stating the xMagnification is just to reel in beginners, same as with telescopes and binoculars. It's an impressive optical zoom; hopefully the IS can keep up for handheld.