Canon PowerShot G5 X Review
Key Features
- 20.2MP 1″-type BSI CMOS sensor
- DIGIC 6 processor
- F1.8-2.8, 24-100mm equiv. lens
- Optical image stabilization
- Built-in ND filter
- 3″ fully articulating touchscreen LCD
- 2.36M-dot electronic viewfinder
- 1080/60p video
- Wi-Fi with NFC
The PowerShot G5 X is one of the latest members of Canon’s 1″-type sensor family, which began with the G7 X in 2014. It takes what made that camera appealing – namely its sensor, lens, and direct controls, and puts them into a body that adds an electronic viewfinder, fully articulating touchscreen LCD, hot shoe, and additional control dial – all without a large increase in size.
The G5 X’s 20.2MP 1″-type BSI CMOS sensor – designed by Sony and first used in its RX100 II and III – performs very well and, given that the image pipeline on the G5 X is the same as its predecessor’s, should continue to do so. The 24-100mm F1.8-2.8 optically stabilized lens is also the same as on the G7 X, so there shouldn’t be any surprises there, either.
From a feature standpoint, the G5 X is essentially the same as the G7 X. You’ve got your manual exposure controls, customizable buttons and dials, built-in neutral density filter, Raw support, 6 fps continuous shooting (JPEG only), a fun star trail mode, 1080/60p video recording and Wi-Fi with NFC.
Sadly, two of the G7 X’s most disappointing traits have carried over to the G5 X, namely sluggish Raw shooting performance and lackluster battery life.
Meet the Family
From left to right: the PowerShot G1 X Mark II, G3 X, G5 X, G7 X, and G9 X |
There are now five members in Canon’s premium compact’ family: the G1 X Mark II, G3 X, G5 X, G7 X and G9 X. The G1 X Mark II is the flagship model, using a considerably larger 1.5″-type sensor instead of the 1″-types used by the rest of the group.
The G7 X is Canon’s original 1″-type sensor camera, and the models that have followed are a variation on the same theme. The G3 X is the long zoom model, the G5 X is for the EVF crowd, and the G9 X is an ultra-compact model with a shorter, slower lens.
Here’s a quick table to help you sort out the differences between the five models:
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That’ll do it for comparisons – let’s dive into the world of the PowerShot G5 X now.
Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)