Engineering:Nikon Coolpix P900

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Short description: Nikon point-and-shoot camera
Nikon Coolpix P900
Nikon COOLPIX P900-4 (24403817010).jpg
Overview
MakerNikon
ReleasedMarch 2, 2015
Intro price600$
Lens
Lens4.3-357 mm (24-2000 mm f/15.8-36.7 equivalent)
F-numbersf/2.8-f/6.5 at the widest
Sensor/medium
Sensor typeCMOS
Sensor size6.17 × 4.55 mm (1/2.3 inch type)
Maximum resolution4608 × 3456 (16 megapixels)
Recording mediumSD, SDHC or SDXC memory card
Shutter
Shutter speeds1/4000 s to 15 s
Continuous shooting7 frames per second
Viewfinder
Frame coverage100%
Image processing
Image processorExpeed C2
White balanceYes
General
Video recording1080p at 60, 50, 30, and 25 fps; VGA at 120 fps
LCD screen3 inches with 921 000 dots
Dimensions140 × 103 × 137 mm (5.51 × 4.06 × 5.39 inches)
Weight899 g including battery

The Nikon Coolpix P900 is a superzoom digital bridge camera announced by Nikon on March 2, 2015. With 83× zoom limit and a maximum 2000 mm 35 mm equivalent focal length,[1] it was the greatest-zooming bridge camera at the time of its announcement,[2] a record it held for almost two years, until the release of Kodak's Pixpro Astro Zoom AZ901 in early 2017 with its 90× zoom ratio. The record was later overtaken by the P900's successor, the Nikon P1000 on September 6, 2018, a record it still holds as of September 2020. The P900 complemented its shorter-zooming sister model, the Nikon Coolpix P610, which was announced a few weeks earlier. Later released is the Nikon Coolpix P950, which is nearly identical to the P900, adding several improvements, the most notable being a flash hotshoe, 4K video and RAW shooting.[3]

See also

References