Refine search for Digital Cameras

Canon PowerShot G10 Review

Author Cliff Smith
Published 12th Dec 2008
Manufacturer Canon
Price £295.65 (Exc VAT)
as reviewed £340.00 (Inc VAT)
Latest Price
Build Quality Score 10 for Build Quality
Features Score 10 for Features
Image Quality Score 9 for Image Quality
Value Score 7 for Value
Overall Score 9 for Overall
Canon PowerShot G10
award recommended

Video Review click here
Watch video review  Watch Video Review    Discuss this article  6 comments    Email this to a friend  Email this to a friend TrustedReviews NewslettersTrustedReviews Newsletters

This seems to be happening a lot lately, but it's exactly a year and a day since I reviewed the Canon PowerShot G9. Time and technology march ever onwards, so today I'm taking a look at the G9's successor, unsurprisingly named the PowerShot G10. Actually it's not as predictable as all that, because for reasons too arcane to discuss here there was no G4 or G8, so this is actually the eighth model in Canon's flagship pro-sumer compact series.


Since the launch of the G1 in 2000, the G series has been the benchmark for high-spec compacts, and the G10 raises the standard even higher. It features a powerful 14.7-megapixel 1/1.7-inch CCD sensor, a large 3.0-inch wide-view monitor with a class-leading resolution of 461k dots, and a 5x zoom image-stabilised f/2.8 - 4.5 lens with a 28mm-equivalent wide-angle setting (the G9 has a 6x zoom equivalent to 35-210mm). It has a full range of manual exposure controls, Raw mode shooting and the same DIGIC IV image processor as Canon's latest digital SLRs. Of course a specification like that doesn't come cheap, and the G10 is currently selling for around £340, although some retailers are charging over £400. This is significantly more expensive than most entry-level DSLRs.

The air is pretty thin up there at the top of the compact camera market, and G10 doesn't have a lot of direct competition. Its closest competitor is the fantastic Panasonic Lumix LX3 (£313), but anyone shopping for a high-spec compact will also want to consider the Nikon CoolPix P6000 (£307) and the Ricoh GR Digital II (£354).


At least the G10 looks like it should cost a lot of money. It's a large and imposing camera, measuring 109.1 x 77.7 x 45.9 mm and weighing approximately 380g fully loaded, around twice the size and weight of a typical pocket compact. It's also a few millimetres larger and around 30g heavier than the G9.

 

Newsletters

Register to receive the latest Reviews and News Headlines directly to your Inbox every day, and enter our regular competitions. More Info.

Your Name


Email Address


Latest 4 of 6 Comments

Have your say: Leave a comment below about this article.

Comment filey said on 13th December 2008

@Spider

I couldn't agree more with your opinion on the iso noise, the LX3 is far superior, the car picture difference is like night and day. It's the sunn... more

Comment Cliff Smith said on 15th December 2008

Who's Clive?

There was no G4 because the word "four" in both Mandarin Chinese and Japanese sounds very much like the word for "death" and is... more

Comment rhodopsin said on 4th January 2009

If you can afford the Canon PowerShot G10 then go for it. It's a stunning little compact camera. I was going to buy the Canon PowerShot G9 in 2008, but my first impression was... more

Comment Michael Digital said on 4th July 2009

I've owned my G10 for a few weeks, but I'm still amazed at the qualty of the images it produces. I have printed iso 200 images at 13" x 19" and the prints are a... more

See all 6 comments on this article.

Add Comment Add your comment

You must be logged in to comment. Login or register here.