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4/06/2011

Nikon D300 Digital SLR Camera Review

The Nikon D300 is another great camera from Nikon and a part of the semi-professional DSLR group. This camera has a lot of features that are up to date compared to its predecessor the D200. The camera features upgraded image censor along with a new VGA 3-inch display and this camera has live view as option when taking pictures.


Nikon went with the DX image censor on this DSLR. The picture quality produced by this camera is a little better than the Canon 40D but it’s the same as the Sony A700. The D300 camera produces 12 mega pixels and 51 focal points from its auto focus sensor. When you use this camera you have two ways for taking pictures you can look through the viewfinder or you can use the 3-inch VGA display in live mode. The viewfinder shows 100% of the image so if that’s what you prefer you won’t be missing anything. If you choose to use the display it’s a good option too with it being VGA the picture it produces is clean and crisp.
 




Conclusion

The D300 has only minor flaws but it’s still a good camera for shooting either fast or normal action photos, this camera takes 6 frames per second. The major thing about this camera is the price compared to the competition its almost 50% more money. The trade off when you buy the cheaper cameras from the competition is you don’t get as many features as you would find in the D300.

The D300 is priced at $1,799.

Nikon D300 Features and Specifications

12.3 megapixel DX format CMOS sensor Self-cleaning sensor unit (low-pass filter vibration) ISO 200 – 3200 (6400 with boost) 14-bit A/D conversion Nikon EXPEED image processor (Capture NX processing and NR algorithms, lower power) Super fast operation (power-up 13 ms, shutter lag 45 ms, black-out 100 ms) Shutter life 150,000 exposures New Multi-CAM3500DX Auto Focus sensor (51-point, 15 cross-type, more vertical coverage) Auto-focus tracking by color (using information from 1005-pixel AE sensor) Auto-focus calibration (fine-tuning) now available (fixed body or up to 20 separate lens settings) Scene Recognition System (uses AE sensor, AF sensor) Picture Control image parameter presets (replace Color Modes I, II and III) Custom image parameters now support brightness as well as contrast Six frames per second continuous shooting (eight frames per second with battery pack) Compact Flash UDMA support 3.0″ 922,000 pixel LCD monitor .
   

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