On a recent trip to Samsung's Seoul headquarters I
got the opportunity to use the new NX20, and get a feel for how it performs. I
only had a short time with a pre-production camera, but overall, my impressions
of its handling and performance are very positive. Certainly, anyone who has
used and liked the NX20's predecessor, the NX10, will find little to complain
about in the new model, and much that is very familiar.
Where it sits in the lineup
The NX20 sits at the top of Samsung's totally
refreshed NX lineup, above the NX210 and NX1000. All three are based around the
same 20MP CMOS sensor and all offer eight frame-per-second continuous shooting
and Wi-Fi-connectivity and control, but the NX20 includes a handful of feature
unique within the range.
The NX210 doesn't include a viewfinder, nor is its
OLED screen articulated - making it less expensive - but it steps forward from
the NX200 by adding Wi-Fi, faster continuous shooting and the option to use a
cable shutter release and proprietary external microphone. The NX1000 is less
expensive still, and features a plastic body, VGA rear screen and retractable
kit zoom. Here we'll mainly look at the features of the NX20 that it offers
over these other cameras, since they are what makes it the range-topping model.
Articulated 'Clear' AMOLED display
Externally, the most obvious difference between the
NX20 and its predecessor is an articulated rear screen. The 3" AMOLED
display offers VGA-equivalent resolution in the now-familiar Samsung 'pentile'
arrangement, giving a perceptual resolution higher than its relatively-low
dot-count of 614k dots might suggest. It's the same underlying OLED panel that
we've seen on all of the NX models so far, and as such it is contrasty and
detailed, with a wide viewing angle. Articulation makes the screen that bit
more usable, of course, especially when it comes to shooting video or stills
from high and low angles.
The NX20's display itself might offer the same
specification as the previous-generation NXs, but there is one significant
design change - the air-gap between the display and protective covering has
been eliminated by filling it with a UV-cured resin that reduces internal
reflections to improve contrast and visibility in bright lighting conditions.
Samsung claims that this 'Clear AMOLED' display offers a 20% improvement in
contrast ratio and, although I wasn't able to test the NX20 alongside an NX10,
it does seem to deliver a genuine benefit in terms of clarity, and I was
impressed by how usable the screen is in direct sunlight.
Aside from the articulated screen, the NX20 handles
in a very similar way to the NX10. The main difference from more recent cameras
like the NX100 and NX200 the provision of an electronic viewfinder, but the
grip too has been changed - it is now more pronounced, making the NX20 a
generally 'rounder' and more comfortable camera to hold. Where the NX200 looks
sharp and stylish, the NX20 looks softer, curvier and more welcoming.
The softer, more rounded design belies a serious
feature set though - 8fps at full-resolution and an electronic first-curtain
shutter allowing a maximum shutter speed of 1/8000 sec with reduced shutter lag
(40 milliseconds) are both pretty impressive. These improvements will be
welcomed by enthusiast photographers, as will a new 'Custom Mode' feature that
allows you to save up to three shooting setups as custom shooting modes. These
can then be recalled, either from the Smart Panel, or from a dedicated 'C'
position on the exposure mode dial.
Custom shooting modes can be named using an on-screen
text-entry dialog or if you're in a hurry, saved automatically by date.
Existing features have been given a refresh too - we've been very impressed by
the evolution of Samsung's 'iFn' on-lens function feature in the NX range, and
iFn 2.0 adds even more options. It's great to see an electronic spirit level
added to the NX20, too, which indicates roll and pitch.
The 100% coverage electronic viewfinder is the key
differentiator between the NX20 and the NX210, and although I was using an
early sample which I was told may not have been up to production quality, I
enjoyed using the finder for image composition. The resolution of the NX20's
EVF is SVGA (800 x 600 pixels, 1.44M dots), and in my experience remains
pleasantly contrasty and detailed in all but the strongest side light (where
like the NX10, the screen image is prone to 'flaring out').
The only serious annoyance that came out of my short
time with the NX20 was related to the position of its direct movie recording
button. I shot a lot of movie clips on the NX20 when I used it, but most of
them were recorded accidentally thanks to the prominence of the movie record
button on the upper right shoulder of the camera.
Apart from this minor irritation though the NX20 is,
like its predecessor, a pleasant camera to use, with an interesting and
competitive feature set. The addition of Wi-Fi is of huge significance to
Samsung as a step on the way to achieving its stated aim of creating a generation
of 'connected cameras' and refinements like increased continuous shooting speed
and display articulation add real benefit in day to day shooting.
I wasn't able to save (or even closely examine)
images from the NX20 that I used in Korea, but there is nothing to suggest that
image quality won't be broadly in line with our expectations based on
experience with the NX200, which uses the same 20MP CMOS sensor. We should be
receiving an NX20 shortly, and we will publish a more in-depth assessment and
sample images as soon as possible.
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