Outwardly, the Nikon EN-EL15 Battery is very similar to last year’s Nikon EN-EL12 Battery model, though they are not quite identical to each other. The Nikon EN-EL12 retains the fairly big and comfortable hand-grip of its predecessor, which still houses the four AA batteries needed to power the camera, but this time around it benefits from a slightly larger textured rubberised area to aid handling. As with the Nikon EN-EL12 Battery, the set of 4 commonly available R6/AA-size batteries share their home with the memory card, and given that there is nothing to keep them in place when the compartment door is open, you need to be careful when changing cards, otherwise the batteries spill out onto the floor.
The front of the Fujifilm NP-120 Battery is dominated by the large lens, even when it sits retracted into its housing, although commendably it’s no larger than the L110′s 15x optic. Upon power-up, the lens extends, provided you have not forgotten to remove the lens cap beforehand. If you have, you will not only need to remove it but also to power the camera off and on again, unless you quickly remove it within a couple of seconds, whereupon the lens extends as normal. The L120′s lens is not terribly fast in terms of its maximum aperture, which is f/3.1 at wide angle and f/5.8 at the telephoto end. The focal range, on the other hand, commands respect, starting at 4.5mm (equivalent to 25mm) and going all the way to 94.5mm (equivalent to 525mm).
The Hp Pavilion dv6000 Battery sports a great addition in the form of a side control lever on the lens barrel. This allows you to zoom the lens in and out using your left hand, as well as the conventional method of the zoom lever. It doesn’t sound like a great deal in theory, but in practice it proves to be a very useful feature, especially when operating the zoom during movie recording. Kudos to Nikon for coming up with a genuinely innovative and helpful design feature, quite a rarity these days.
Thankfully Nikon have included Vibration Reduction (VR) to help prevent camera-shake, an essential feature on a camera like this. As is the case with many other Nikon compacts, VR in the L15 is of the sensor-shift variety rather than the in-lens version used in the manufacturer’s SLR system. In addition to “pure” mechanical vibration reduction, you may choose a “hybrid” form of image stabilisation, in which case Dell XPS M1530 Charger is complemented by a solution that involves taking two shots in succession, which are then combined in-camera for greater effect. Naturally this takes more time, but can yield better results in certain circumstances.
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