Useful tips

Is the D90 still a good camera?

Is the D90 still a good camera?

This rating puts the D90 below average of all digital single lens reflex cameras. In terms of its sensor size category (APS cameras), the D90 also ranks below average. – Well, the Nikon D90 is more than 12 years old, and there have been many other good digital cameras released since 2008.

Is the D7000 still a good camera?

Unless you have Nikon Acquisition Syndrome (like most of the folks here) the D7000 is plenty good. Just make sure your lenses are up-to-par. Just start shooting and if you feel the need to upgrade, get a D7500!

Is Nikon D7000 discontinued?

The Nikon D7000 is a mid-tier DSLR with a high-resolution 16.2 MP DX-format CMOS sensor and a powerful EXPEED 2 processor at its heart. Note that the D7000 is now discontinued, and the newest camera in this lineup, as of September 2018, is the Nikon D7500.

What’s the difference between the Nikon D7000 and D90?

Nikon D7000 has a 16.2 Megapixel sensor, while the D90 has a 12.3 Megapixel sensor.

Where can I buy a Nikon D7000 body only?

Nikon D7000 (27.3 oz./774g with battery, strap rings and card, $750 new, $1,000 new with 18-105 VR, about $550 used or $1,000 refurbished) and 35mm f/1.8 DX. enlarge. I bought mine at Adorama; today you can get it new at Amazon as body-only or with 18-105mm lens, or used at this link directly to them at eBay (see How to Win at eBay ).

What’s the biggest beef with the Nikon D7000?

The D7000’s U1 and U2 positions finally address my biggest beef with Nikon, which is the lack of any fast way to save and recall complete banks of camera settings. With all my other older Nikons, it takes too long to reset a camera to go from people to landscape photography, so I keep one camera for each kind of shooting.

How big is the RGB meter on the Nikon D7000?

The D7000 has the world’s first 2,016-segment RGB meter, which is Nikon’s first upgrade since the spectacular 1,005 segment RGB meter of the Nikon F5 of 1996. The number of meter segments isn’t relevant; what is relevant is the intelligence programmed behind them, and Nikon’s meters have always been decades ahead of anyone else’s.