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Nikon D80 Review

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Two and a half years ago Nikon announced the six megapixel D70, their first affordable enthusiasts digital SLR, it proved to be a very popular camera and strong competitor to the Canon EOS 300D (Digital Rebel). Just fifteen months later Nikon revealed the D70s which was essentially the same camera with a some subtle tweaks (improved AF, wider flash coverage, higher capacity battery, larger LCD monitor). And so just over fifteen months on from the D70s Nikon present the latest incarnation of their 'enthusiasts' digital SLR line, the ten megapixel Nikon d80 battery. The D80 slots nicely between the entry-level D50 and the semi-professional / professional D200, clearly based on the D70 design but also different enough to be seen as a completely new model. It features a ten megapixel DX format CCD (the same we presume as used by Sony in the DSLR-A100), the metering sensor from the D50 and numerous other items taken or modified from the D200. UPDATE 18/Dec/06: In our original review a mistake was made in the measurement of the ISO sensitivity of the Canon EOS 400D as used for comparison, this has now been corrected and the releveant pages of this review updated. Key features 10.2 megapixel DX format CCD (1.5x FOV crop) Image processing engine (similar to D200 / D2X) 3D Color Matrix Metering II, 420 pixel sensor (same as D50) 11-area AF system (new version of Multi-CAM 1000, similar to D200) Custom Auto ISO (selectable maximum ISO, minimum shutter speed) Configurable high ISO and long exposure noise reduction Mechanical only shutter (maximum 1/4000 sec, flash sync to 1/200 sec) Quoted 80 ms shutter lag (short viewfinder blackout; 160 ms) Larger, brighter pentaprism viewfinder (x0.94 magnification) Support for SD-HC (SD cards over 2 GB in capacity) In-camera retouching D-Lighting (shadow / highlight enhancement) Red-eye reduction Trimming Monochrome Filter effects Small picture Image overlay Multiple-exposures Compact body (smaller, lighter than D70/D70s) Improved menu user interface (same as D200) Higher capacity EN-EL3e battery (provides detailed information, same as Nikon d80 battery) Wireless flash integration (same as D200) The camera body is technically slightly smaller in all dimensions compared to those of the D70s, but current owners will find the design very similar. Most of the buttons are the same and in the same places, and there are dedicated buttons for many commonly used functions. For example, a cluster of buttons next to the shutter let you change metering mode, exposure compensation, drive mode, and AF mode. Meanwhile, the buttons to the left of the 2.5-inch, 230,000-pixel LCD screen let you change white balance, ISO, and image size and quality settings without diving into menus. About the only function without its own dedicated control is AF zone selection, though the camera's programmable function button can be programmed to cover that if you so choose. The default for this button is to display the current ISO setting. Three dials adorn the camera body. The Nikon d80 battery lets you choose between program, aperture- or shutter-priority, full manual, full auto, or any of six preset exposure scene modes. The other two dials, located on the front and back of the grip, let you change aperture and shutter speed. Together, they make full manual shooting quick and easy. Nikon's menu system is straightforward and, for the most part, intuitive. An option in the setup menu lets you hide some of the menu items by either selecting Nikon's preshortened Simple menu, which displays only what Nikon thinks are the most commonly changed menu items, or My Menu, which lets you choose which items the camera displays in each of the playback, shooting, custom setting, and retouch menus. Never heard of the retouch menu? That's because it's new. The more clear differences come in ergonomics, usability, and other performance. The D80 simply doesn't get anything wrong in any of those categories. It's a well-rounded design that does everything well, but nothing perfectly. The other 10mp cameras all seem to get one thing or another not quite right, so I'd say they do most everything well. But you really need to handle and test these cameras yourself to see if anything holds you back on any individual camera. My advice is to try as many of the models as you can and choose based upon your visceral reaction to the designs. You'll clearly prefer the way one or another is laid out and the controls managed. That's the one you should choose Nikon d80 battery. Because, when all is said and done, these cameras are all going to get very similar results in the hands of the skilled. Thus, the key differentiator is whether or not you're going to feel comfortable "getting skilled" with that camera. How fast can you change controls? How much (and how clear is the) information you are getting from the camera? Has Thom Hogan written a book about it that really tells you how the camera works? (Okay, shameless self promotion, that was. What can I say, I woke up this morning with as much testosterone as Floyd Landis, apparently ;~) Does the feature set have the controls you'll want as you grow in shooting confidence?

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