Nikon D3300 24.2 MP CMOS Digital SLR with AF-S DX NIKKOR
Nikon D3300 24.2 MP CMOS Digital SLR with AF-S DX NIKKOR
Nikon D Nikon D3300 24.2 MP CMOS Digital SLR with AF-S DX NIKKOR 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6G VR II Zoom Lens (Black)
- 24.2 MP CMOS DX-format sensor
- 5 frames per second continuous shooting
- 11 AF points with 3D tracking
- ISO 100-12800 (expandable to 25600)
- 1080 (60, 50, 30, 25, 24 fps) HD video (MPEG-4/H.264/MOV)
- 3 inch LCD with 921,000 dots
- Expeed 4 processing
- Special Shipping Information: Due to federal and international regulations, this product can only be shipped within the 50 states.
Nikon D3300 24.2 MP CMOS Digital SLR with AF-S DX NIKKOR
D800 bodies Nikon sold
I bought one of the first D800 bodies Nikon
sold. And, yes, I had the left-side AF issues that other folks describe
in these reviews. I had been using the camera for a couple of months,
and was very pleased with the quality of images I was getting. However, I
decided to have the left side focus points fixed in case I ever needed
to move my focus point over to the left side. I sent my D800 in to Nikon
USA Repair in Melville, NY. It came back fixed and worked great.
In
the meantime, a D800E arrived that had been on order since February
7th. After a week of shooting both the D800 and D800E, I decided to sell
the D800 and buy another D800E. I like to have two identical bodies so I
always have a backup camera on treks, and one that has the same
controls as my other body. I was planning to keep the D800 as my backup
until I saw the images coming out of the D800E and after I did extensive
testing with the FoCal software from Reikan Technology.
I only
shoot RAW (Nikon NEF format). While I could post process the images from
the D800 and D800E using Adobe Creative Suite CS6, and make them look
almost identical...they were in fact not identical. As long as I was
shooting landscapes, the images from the two cameras would appear to
have the same level of details in my first prints. However, when I
started to do prints larger than 16 in x 24, I was convinced the D800E
was the winner. You could clearly see the finer details.
After I
started using the FoCal software to do my AF Fine Tuning, I also found
major differences in the sharpness the D800E could produce. While FoCal
is not currently designed for use in comparing camera bodies, it does
provide that capability if you carefully control the lighting on your
target, the distance to target and the camera/lens settings.Read more
D800 bodies Nikon sold