Samsung NX1

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Samsung NX1
Samsung NX1 with battery grip and 16-50mm f/2-2.8 lens
Overview
MakerSamsung
Lens
Lens mountSamsung NX
Sensor/medium
Sensor typeBSI-CMOS[1]
Sensor size23.5 x 15.7 mm (APS-C type)
Sensor makerSamsung
Maximum resolution6480 x 4320 (28 megapixels)
Film speed100-25600, expandable to 51200
Recording mediumSD, SDHC, SDXC (UHS-I/II supported)
Focusing
FocusHybrid AF
Focus areas209 focus points
Flash
FlashBuilt In and Hot Shoe
Shutter
Frame rate15 FPS
Shutter speeds1/8000s to 30s
Continuous shooting15 frames per second
Viewfinder
Viewfinder magnification1.04
Frame coverage100%
Image processing
Image processorDRIMe 5
White balanceYes
General
LCD screen3 inches with 1,036,000 dots
Dimensions139 x 102 x 66mm (5.47 x 4.02 x 2.6 inches)
Weight550 g including battery

Samsung NX1 is a 28.2 MP Wireless SMART Mirrorless Digital Camera body, using the NX System lens mount. A variety of professional and consumer lenses were introduced along with the camera. It was announced by Samsung on September 15, 2014. It uses TIZEN OS as its main Operating System and has 4k video recording. The NX1 has a weather-resistant magnesium alloy body, 3" tilting Super AMOLED touchscreen display, 2.36M dot OLED EVF with 5ms lag, LCD info display on top of camera, built-in 802.11ac Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, USB 3.0 interface, Hybrid AF system with 205 phase-detect points covering 90% of the frame, and 15 fps burst shooting with continuous autofocus. It can output 4:2:2 8-bit 4K video over HDMI, has context-sensitive adaptive noise reduction, stripe pattern AF illuminator with 15m range and optional battery grip. It was the first commercially available camera featuring a back-illuminated APS-C sized sensor. While Samsung never formally announced the discontinuation of the NX system, major retailers showed the NX1 as being "out of stock" around April 2016.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Zimmerman, Steven (12 October 2016). "Sony IMX378: Comprehensive Breakdown of the Google Pixel's Sensor and its Features". XDA Developers. Retrieved 17 October 2016.

External links[edit]