Kodak EasyShare P712 review

Can Kodak's latest bridge camera keep enthusiast happy?

It may look the part, shame about the pictures

TechRadar Verdict

Size isn't everything. A huge 12x stabilised lens is a great addition to any camera at this price, but the Kodak needs similar boosts in speed, handling and raw image quality.

Pros

  • +

    Full exposure control

Cons

  • -

    It's loud in use

    Poor ISO levels

    Slow to process images

    Visible noise in day shots

Why you can trust TechRadar We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you're buying the best. Find out more about how we test.

Poor old Kodak. Not only has the company that once dominated amateur photography had to watch consumer electronics manufacturers muscle in on its turf, it's now losing yet more ground as photographers migrate to digital SLRs.

The Kodak P712 is a brave attempt to fight back, combining some of the creative features found on today's budget D-SLRs, with a long lens and some consumer-friendly functions like image stabilisation and movie capture. For a start, the P712 lacks the super-sized ugliness of some predecessors.

Booming camera

Distortion and fringing, while visible, are well controlled. But the Schneider-Kreuznach optics are probably the noisiest we've ever used, squeaking and whining throughout the range, and it can be slow to respond. Speed is a problem for the Kodak across the board. Powering up takes around five seconds and processing times are truly lethargical: six seconds for a JPEG and up to a minute for TIFF and RAW files. Burst mode captures up to five frames at 1.5fps, although at least the reliable autofocusing is near instant.

When it comes to features, Kodak's heart is the right place. There's full exposure control, with good over- and under-exposure feedback and bracketing. You can set and tweak the white balance, choose interval shooting, move metering zones around, tinker with the exposure lock and check clipping. But overall the whole package hasn't been thought through for the enthusiast.

You can't bump the aperture or shutter speed in Program mode, for example, and popping up the flash for a burst of fill takes a button press, a scroll through the flash menu followed by another button press. And then it's the same palaver to turn it all off again.

Kodak might think that offering ten ISO sensitivities makes the P712 more attractive to serious snappers. On the contrary, when the maximum ISO in normal shooting is a meagre 400, all those intermediate settings only postpone your disappointment. Many manufacturers have been concentrating on improving low-light and night photography, but not Kodak. Prepare yourself for some dull and grainy images if the light level is anything but bright.

Playback mode shows similarly frustrated aspirations. It's great to have a histogram, but why is it so small? An in-camera RAW Develop function is smart - you can choose colour, sharpening, contrast options and more, then save the image as a TIFF or JPEG. But then you can't simultaneously magnify an image while viewing its properties.

Image quality from the P712 is more of a reflection of its price rather than its ambitions. While daylight shots are bright and engaging, noise is visible at all sensitivities (and climbs towards unacceptable at ISO400). Both JPEG and RAW images are softer than they should be, although that does benefit when you want to take a flattering portrait.

Will the P712 tempt you from upgrading to an SLR? Probably not. It's slow, ungainly, and can't really compete in image quality with even the cheapest 6Mp D-SLR. However, it does offer a powerful, stabilised lens at a reasonable price, albeit without the flair of Panasonic's TZ1 and FZ7 or the all-round optical competence of Canon's S3 IS. Mark Harris

Via PhotoRadar

Tech.co.uk was the former name of TechRadar.com. Its staff were at the forefront of the digital publishing revolution, and spearheaded the move to bring consumer technology journalism to its natural home – online. Many of the current TechRadar staff started life a Tech.co.uk staff writer, covering everything from the emerging smartphone market to the evolving market of personal computers. Think of it as the building blocks of the TechRadar you love today.