Testseek.fr ont rassemblé 153 examens experts du Fujifilm X-T1 et l'estimation moyenne est 89%. Faites descendre l'écran et voyez les toutes les revues pour Fujifilm X-T1.
February 2014
(89%)
153 Avis
Note moyenne issue des avis d’experts sur ce produit.
Utilisateurs
(94%)
239 Avis
Note moyenne délivrée par les utilisateurs du produit.
890100153
Les éditeurs ont aimé
Qualité de la gestion du bruit électronique jusqu'à 6400 ISO
Pas moins de 7 modes personnalisables
Bonne ergonomie générale
Nombreuses molettes
Finition tout temps du boîtier
Large viseur électronique
Bonne fluidité même en basse lumière
Stigmomèt
Capteur X-Trans II reconnu et performant
Résistant à l'eau
Aux poussières et au froid
Viseur électronique amélioré
Enfin un grip
Très bon parc optique
Bonne rafale théorique
Qualité de la gestion du bruit électronique jusqu'à 6400 ISO
Objectif de kit 18-55 mm f/2
8-4 OIS d'excellente facture
Viseur électronique large et confortable
Rafale à 8 i/s
Écran inclinable de qualité
Connexion Wi-Fi
Look
Tropicalisation
Ergonomie
Ecran orientable
Qualité d'image jusqu'à 6400 ISO
Mode rafale à 8im/s
Autofocus plus réactif
Wi
Fi intégré
Confortable viseur électronique
Supporte les cartes UHS Class II
Parc optique engageant
Poignée d'aliment
Les éditeurs n'ont pas aimé
Autonomie de la batterie trop courte (possibilité d'adapter une poignée d'alimentation)
Autofocus encore en retrait par rapport aux reflex et aux Micro 4/3
Obturateur au 1/4000 s seulement. Pas d'obturation 100% électronique pour un mode silencieux
Qua
Ecran non orientable
AF encore en deçà de la concurrence sur le prototype
Pas de double emplacement pour carte mémoire
Autofocus en retrait par rapport aux meilleurs Micro 4/3 et reflex experts
Écran LCD non tactile
Mode vidéo décevant
Pas de sortie casque pour la vidéo
Pas de flash intégré (mais livré dans la boîte)
Niveau électronique sur un seul axe
18-55 mm non
Ecran pas tactile
Autonomie de la batterie faiblarde
Graphisme et ergonomie des menus ayant fait leur temps
Autofocus en léger retrait face au plus performant micro 4/3 et aux réflex
Even though the X-T1 breaks with Fujifilm's “poor-man's Leica” image given the company's past adherence to rangefinder-style designs, this is one hot camera with pure Fuji blood flowing through its digital veins. It has the raw sex appeal and performance ...
Solid button and dial festooned construction, choice of eye level viewfinder and rear panel LCD, smaller than the semi pro DSLR the Fuji's construction recalls
Narrowish handgrip, cramped control layout on top plate, no body integral anti shake mechanism (via specialist lenses only)
Fuji's deliberately SLR-styled X-T1 is the closest the company has come yet to blending yesteryear styling with bang up-to-date technology. It's difficult to see how the manufacturer could do any more at this stage, and within the compact system camera fo...
Firstrate picture quality and low digital noise levels up to 6400 ISO, Excellent 1855 mm f/2.84 OIS kit lens, Large and comfortable EVF, 8 fps burst mode, Camera body has weatherproof finish, Goodquality tilt screen, WiFi with comprehensive smartphone app
LCD doesn't have touchscreen controls, Disappointing video mode, No headphones out for video, No builtin flash (separate flash accessory supplied), Electronic level on one axis only, Autofocus isn't as speedy as the best micro 4/3 models, 1855 mm kit lens
The Fujifilm X-T1 is an excellent camera. It boasts first-rate picture quality with improved general responsiveness, a slightly reworked set of controls, and a viewfinder that's surprisingly pleasant and comfortable for an EVF. When mirrorless hybrids get...
The X-T1 combines excellent design with a specification that makes it great value even at its circa-£1000 price tag. Above all, it produces breathtaking images and can be relied upon whatever the conditions, making it perhaps the best CSC on the market.Ne...
Publié: 2014-02-28, Auteur: Michael , review by: gizmodo.co.uk
Looks can take a camera further than most photographers are willing to admit, and the X-T1 is exquisitely beautiful. It's an all-around speedy camera in AF, startup time, and burst rate. Image quality is terrific and the lens selection is becoming more ro
The controls on the X-T1 are a mess. They go too far into analogue nostalgia at the expense of simplicity and speed. The EVF, while big, is very noisy in low light,
You can make a solid case the X-T1, especially at its at £1049 price. Despite the control quirks, there is currently no better high-end APS-C mirrorless camera out there. If you are willing to sacrifice sensor size, I would absolutely recommend the simila...
Publié: 2014-02-27, Auteur: Lori , review by: CNET.co.uk
The stunning viewfinder, comfy grip and plethora of direct controls makes the Fujifilm X-T1 a joy to shoot with, plus the image quality is great and the continuous-shooting is among the best in its class
Some of the controls are too hard to manipulate, its general performance doesn't stand out, and the movie quality disappoints
The Fujifilm X-T1 is a great camera for advanced photographers as long as its quirks don't bother you....
Traditional controls, Rugged build, Wi, Fi, Tilting LCD
Advanced Filter JPEG only, Screen not vari, angle
Well, Fuji has done it again: produced a camera that is not only beautiful, but is capable of producing some superb images. We can see this being top of many a photographer's lust list, and for good reason – it's top of ours too....
You've probably figured out that we really like this camera. Almost everything about it is top tier: cosmetic design, ergonomics, viewfinder, controls, image quality, performance. We particularly like having physical dials for exposure compensation, shutt...
Publié: 2014-02-10, Auteur: Mike , review by: pocket-lint.com
Giant viewfinder is ace, excellent image quality just like X-E2, retro mode dials are great in use, solid build with weather-sealing, tilt-angle LCD screen
Autofocus not fastest in class, no weather-sealed lenses (yet), single SD, so-so battery life, viewfinder ghosting in dim light, some tight button placement
Let's get the slight downsides out of the way first: the X-T1 could do with a better battery, autofocus needs to be refined for precision, and continuous autofocus won't keep a similar price DSLR at bay in our opinion. Oh and there are no weather-se...