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Sony Cyber-shot DSC-H9 (Black)

camera on top side back
camera on top side back

Product summary

The goodThe good: Relatively wide angle for a megazoom; tons of manual and automatic features; large, flip-up LCD; fast continuous shooting.

The badThe bad: Small EVF; lens aberrations and vignetting; image noise and some processing artifacts; lacks hotshoe and raw file support.

The bottom lineThe bottom line: If you shoot primarily outdoors in daytime--especially sports, children and animals--the Sony Cyber-shot DSC-H9 is a great choice. The cheaper DSC-H7 has a smaller LCD, lacks infrared shooting, and has a few interface differences, but is otherwise identical.

Specifications: Digital camera type: Full body; Resolution: 8.1 megapixels; Optical zoom: 15 x; See full specs

Price range: $296.99 - $549.95

See all products in the Sony Cyber Shot DSC-H9 series

CNET editors' review

  • Reviewed on: 06/19/2007
  • Released on: 02/21/2007

Sony changed quite a few details, inside and out, between last year's H5 and its latest megazooms, the Cyber-shot DSC-H9 and DSC-H7. An f/2.7-4.5 31mm-465mm 15x supersedes the 12x zoom on last year's, and the resolution kicks up a notch from 7 to 8 megapixels. Say goodbye to AA batteries and hello to a proprietary lithium ion.

Two features differentiate the H9 and H7: The H9 retains the same excellent 3-inch flip-up LCD as the H5, while the H7 uses a fixed 2.5-inch version, and the H9 includes Sony's NightShot infrared mode. They are otherwise identical, and we expect the same performance and photo quality. We tested the H9.

The plastic body feels a bit cheap, and the grip--a bit larger than the H5's--could use more of a rubbery texture. Sony also "improves" upon the simple 4-way-plus-set navigation controls of the H5 by adding a scroll wheel and now-Sony-standard Home and Menu buttons. I love the scroll wheel, but it takes a little while to get used to the operation for adjusting shooting settings. You toggle between changing the particular setting and changing the settings values with the OK/Set button; the changeable option turns yellow. In theory, it's all very logical. But in the heat of the shoot, it requires a little too much thinking. Still, it makes sense, so it shouldn't take long to adapt.

And after using several Sonys, I'm still not thrilled with the Home button. When you press it, the first item it shows you is Shooting; but when you select that, it displays the current mode dial setting and tells you to use the Menu button to change the current settings. In other words, telling you that you've pressed the wrong button. If it's that confusing, perhaps it needs some restructuring. On the other hand, you have to scroll over four categories and down a level to get to settings such as AF illuminator and AF mode, then down another level to change the flash-sync mode. (Especially since you can get to these more easily via the Menu button.) True, these aren't settings you want to change frequently, but why bury them quite so deeply and keep the useless info close to the surface?

The H7 and H9 offer a typical set of manual, semimanual, and automatic exposure options, including scene modes for high ISO, portrait, twilight portrait, landscape, twilight, beach, snow, and fireworks. (Inexplicably, on the H7, the metering and bracketing/continuous shooting must be changed via the LCD, while on the H9, they have dedicated buttons.) There are also newfangled choices such as Face Detection, Advanced Sports Shooting, and NightShot infrared mode. Face Detection only operates within full automatic mode, and you have no control over which faces it sees or selects. The Advanced sports mode sets the camera to a fast shutter speed and uses a continuous autofocus.

If you don't count the slog through the menus, the H9--and by extension, H7--delivers good speed for its class. Based on CNET Labs' test results, it wakes up and shoots in a reasonable 2.1 seconds, with a shutter lag of 0.6 and 1.3 seconds in bright and dim light, respectively. It can shoot consecutive single images 1.4 seconds apart, growing to a modest 2.9 seconds with flash enabled. Continuous shooting is fixed at about 2 frames per second (fps), regardless of image size, and can run for about 18 shots before it starts to slow. I was a bit disappointed by the surprisingly small electronic viewfinder. Sony's Super SteadyShot optical image stabilization, as ever, works very well.

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Where to buy

Sony Cyber-shot DSC-H9 (Black): $296.99 - $549.95
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Sony Electronics, Inc.
$296.99 No 5.0 star rating
Amazon.com
$549.95 Yes 5.0 star rating

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Where to buy Sony Cyber-shot DSC-H9 (Black)

Price range: $296.99 - $549.95

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Reviews from around the Web

  • dpreview.com

    Editors' rating: 80

    Summary: I have to say that the H9 was a camera I really expected to like, and I started this review expecting to be able to rave about how a great camera had got even better.

    Read full review

  • gadgetguy.com.au

    Summary: The H9 is an ideal bridge camera for use by operators varying in skill level: for the novice there's an auto mode plus an array of scene modes that can cope with sports shooting, beach and snow scenes, low light and more. The more expert can fine tune exp

    Read full review

  • digitalcamerareview.com

    Read full review

  • dcresource.com

    Summary: Generally speaking, new cameras are improvements over their predecessors. Unfortunately, I don't think this is the case with the Sony Cyber-shot DSC-H9. In most respects, it's actually worse than the DSC-H5 that came before it, which was generally regarde

    Read full review

  • digitalcamerainfo.com

    Summary: Everything about the Sony Cyber-shot DSC-H9 is big. It has a big Carl Zeiss 15x optical zoom lens with optical image stabilization and a big 3-inch LCD screen that folds out and doesn't skimp on resolution. It can accept big memory cards up to 8GB so it c

    Read full review

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