Canon G9X (1" sensor pocket camera)

Stress_Test

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As a birthday present to myself, I recently ordered a Canon G9X Powershot camera. It just arrived, so happy birthday to me! :)

I purchased this because I was looking for something with better low-light capability than the other compact cameras I had been using. I've had a Canon SX160 for a little while now, but it still has the small (2/3 I think) sensor, a max ISO of 1600, and the quality is pretty bad at high ISO. I tend to do end up doing a lot of shooting in dim light so I wanted to upgrade (also the SX160 has been having an issue or two so I don't know how much longer it'll hold on).

The G9X has a 1" CMOS sensor that will go up to 12,800 ISO and also has a max aperture of f2.0 so it should be able to handle most situations I find myself in. There are several reviews out there that will cover much more technical detail if you're interested so I think I'll just list a few impressions (btw I'm strictly an amateur who has recently taken an interest in the past couple of years; my "big gun" camera is a Canon T5 DSLR that I use when I go somewhere planning ahead of time to take photos, and a pocket camera is usually the EDC).

So, first a couple of pictures to show size. Most reviewers will show the camera in their hand, but that usually doesn't help much since hands come in a vast array of sizes. So here's the G9X with some familiar objects! :D

On4LR1a.jpg


TG7rVdp.jpg



It's a bit thicker than most entry-level pocket cams, partly due to the lens, but still pocketable.

The main difference is that this one is primarily touch-screen driven. I'm not that big a fan of touch screens, but I figured it'd be a necessary evil in this case to get minimum size and still have all the flexibility and features of a full size camera. It works well enough, though I still have had some frustration when I'm tapping on it and it doesn't register, or does something other than what I intend. The good news is, the dial around the lens and the set button can be used together to reduce the dependency on touch screen somewhat. The buttons are smaller and more recessed that I realized looking at the product images, but so far no issues, it just takes a fairly deliberate push (which is usually a good thing). There's not a whole lot to grip due to the size, so I have to remind myself to keep my fingers off the screen to avoid activating things. The screen can be set to lock after a time period.

The control ring around the lens has a positive feel and has click detents. The knurling allows good grip but it's a little too stiff to operate easily with just a finger tip when holding the camera; works best to grip top and bottom and rotate. The shutter button has a very light spring to it so it may take a more delicate touch than what you're used to. On the plus side, that makes it easier to gently squeeze off a shot without moving the camera if you're using a low shutter speed.

On the battery and SD card slots: The door has an easy to use slide lock. The card slot is a bit easier to use than some of my other cameras because the card doesn't sit so far down in the slot when locked in place. The battery is held in by a tiny little plastic finger which is somewhat tricky to move since it's so small. The good news is that the battery can be charged in the camera via the USB cable. Strangely, Canon doesn't include this cable in the box. My other two Canon cams had a USB cable included so not sure what that's about. And even stranger, it's a different USB port than the other cameras. Luckily I had a cable from a Kindle reader, which fits. A wall-plug battery charger is included if you don't want to charge via USB. It was about 2 hours to charge the battery starting from about 3.5v. (the battery terminals are exposed so you can check it with a multimeter, which is a BIG plus in my book. I like to know what the actual voltage is instead of only having the screen battery meter).

I haven't put it through any real use so far other than test shots around the home, but so far I'm pretty pleased. The ISO performance looks about on par with my T5 DSLR so I think I'll be set for those low-light situations when I don't have the T5.

That's all for now; maybe I'll have the chance to get some shots during the work day tomorrow :)
 

Stress_Test

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Couple of shots from today when it was snowing like crazy (didn't really stick all that much though).

These are unaltered jpegs in the normal Medium1 size (about 12 MP). The only thing I did was to re-save them with more compression to reduce the file size for uploading.

These were taken with the "auto" mode setting and so far I've been pretty impressed by how well the camera can "read" the scene in front of it and choose settings/focus accordingly. That's very helpful when you need to fire off a fast shot and don't have time to fiddle with settings (which is difficult on a small camera vs a full-size DSLR in most cases).

The window glass isn't exactly clean so keep that in mind!

rOV3v5D.jpg


QmPGQ3E.jpg
 

blah9

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Awesome camera and cool shots! Thank you for sharing your thoughts. I have a Canon T3 from a few years back that I've been pretty happy with, but I'm interested in looking into one of the more compact cameras in a couple years or so. They've really seemed to get better recently. :)
 

Stress_Test

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Thanks, glad you liked!

There are some amazing (but expensive) compact cameras out there now. One thing I have learned is the importance of sensor size vs image quality, especially for low light shots. Entry level pocket cameras can have great image quality in bright daylight but fall down in dim lighting that requires more ISO. Be sure to research before you buy!

I consider the G9X expensive for a pocket camera, but I decided this was a case of "buy once, cry once". Might as well spend the money and get the performance I want. :)
 

Hoggy

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Re: Canon G9X (1" sensor pocket camera) - save in RAW!!!

Oy! Not Jpeg! The horror - the horror! :rant:

If it's anything like the Canon G7X, it should be able to save in raw. Saving in raw doesn't bake in the white balance (color temperature, tint, and gamut(sRGB, or AdobeRGB) - so it can later be changed without any degradation.

With a program like Adobe Photoshop Lightroom, dealing with raw is no different from dealing with jpeg as far as the adjustment sliders, etc go. Only you will have FAR more latitude in things like recovering from bad exposure, and countless other adjustments in addition to white balance. Put it this way: Jpeg is 8 bits with lossy compression - raw is usually 12 or 14 bits! I know both the older Canon S100 and the newer G7X both save 12-bit raws, so the G9X is likely the same... So JPG has 256 levels of brightness for each of Red, Green, and Blue. 12-bit raw has 4096 levels, and 14-bit raw has 16,384 levels!

I have so many JPGs from years past that I desperately WISH I had saved in raw when I had a camera capable of it (Fuji S7000), but never the other way around. I just didn't know how to deal with raw back then - I hadn't heard of the amazing Lightroom program (which is also superb at organizing them, too).
 

SCEMan

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Re: Canon G9X (1" sensor pocket camera) - save in RAW!!!

Looks very nice.:thumbsup: Reminiscent of my Sony RX100 that worked so wonderfully on our European vacation last year. It's great to have a "DSLR in your pocket" option when touring foreign countries.
 

Stress_Test

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Re: Canon G9X (1" sensor pocket camera) - save in RAW!!!

I did take a long look at the RX100 as well. It does have some advantages still. Ultimately though I went with the Canon because a couple of the reviews I read commented on the user-friendliness of the Canon, and that's a big deal to me. The interfaces of the Canons I've used always seem intuitive to me for the most part.

For raw shooters the G9X does have a handy raw+jpeg feature where you can select any size jpeg, rather than being stuck with the raw file plus the max size jpeg like some cameras.
 

bykfixer

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Re: Canon G9X (1" sensor pocket camera) - save in RAW!!!

Reviving an older thread, yesterday I went looking for a jacket pocket camera with lots of controls for $500 or less. At the big box store they had some G9x and G9x Mk2 in stock. The Mk 2 is priced less, by a lot. That was a surprise.

I have been carrying a Canon P&S for work for about 10 years. The type that is either full auto or a very very limited "program" mode available. For work it is mainly still shots so the 24mm (equivilent) lens is very handy to get in that little extra in the frame and not have everything look distorted. It zooms at 5x, which aint bad and its 12mp makes for not so big file sizes. It uses a 2gb memory card. Yup there was a time when a 2gb card was huge.

Anyway the G9x gets such rave reviews that I had a hard time not picking that one. The 1" sensor was something I had not heard of until yesterday. See, I went all (Nikon) SLR for a while so my celphone was the pocket cam, or that little Canon. Yet after being subjected to years of adverse conditions like extreme heat or cold storage in a truck, dropped who knows how many times it still works most of the time.

Now with todays wireless everything it makes sense to wifi your photos to a laptop, or tablet. Using an apple cam I see no need to have a P&S number to transfer pix to my iPhone as its camera is pretty good. Plus with their funky arse os who knows if you can even view on your phone your canon pix post ios13. I suppose you can. Being my old P&S isn't wifi capable it doesn't matter. But touch screen technology, an optical viewfinder, wifi, RAW, pop up adjustable flash and a lot of SLR features the G9x has a lot to like in 2020 even though it's a 2016 dinosaur to some degree.

When I was really into photography 2005 to about 2012 technology was so rapid that you almost had to replace your gear every 90 days to keep up. It was ridiculous. Frankly I'm glad celphone cams took over for that reason alone. I bought a Nikon 700 because it got great reviews. 30 days later everybody said "the 700 is an anchor buy the 800", then a few months later "don't waste your money on the 800, buy the 750"………it just kept going on and on.

It was refreshing to see makers set their sites on quality of image instead of all those gadgets and gimmicks. So to see 2016/17 model cameras still being sold in stores was a pleasant surprise. I settled on a Panasonic camera because past experience showed me I like their algorithms over Canon and Nikon for portable cameras. The color quality leans toward a Canon "pop" while being a bit subdued like a Nikon. Plus it has 10x zoom. So the one I picked was from the same era as the G9x but has better still frame from movie clips and the zoom capability put me over the edge.

If you've ever tried to snap pix of lightning you know that is like grabbing the wind. Not easy to do. So the ability to grab frames of a digital movie and save it in camera is the easiest way. And the more fps the more likely to get that awesome lightning photo.

Mrs Fixer now wants a nicer P&S than the little Canon I bought her that is like mine from circa 2010. Only hers is the modern version of it at 22mp. She's all about some Canon so I'll probably grab a G9x Mk 2 for her in the fall. But first I will study whether the Mk2 is actually all that much better than the 016 G9x.
 
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