Thursday December 21, 2006
I've been looking around for a new digital camera for past few days as my original camera died. Initially I was looking for a compact digital camera (with second thoughts on digital SLR) and narrowed down my search to Nikon Coolpix S10 (impressive 10x optical zoom) and Canon SD 800. They both are great cameras but I did not like Coolpix S10 mainly because of the swivel design of lens (it has advantages but I'd rather have one less mechanical moving part) and non-uniform thickness of the camera. Canon SD 800 is a one of the finest in compact segment but has very limited manual controls, specially manual focus.
So I prepared a list of features that I need:
#1 - #3 features are must, #4 is very common these days and #5 restricted my choice to Nikon. And after all Nikon is a well established name in cameras and offers wide variety in digital cameras so I consider it a safe bet (another personal reason listed below). After preparing the feature list, it was evident that features #1, #2 and #3 are not supported by digital compact cameras. Prosumer digital compact cameras (PROfessional features + conSUMER body) offer burst shooting but it's tend to give blurry pictures because of the slow focusing ability. So I decided to purchase a digital SLR which can serve the required functionality.
Nikon
D200 is a great camera targeted at professionals but is slightly on the
expensive side (approx $2000). D40
is released last month, cheap but can only Auto Focus with lenses that have
built-in focus motors (my existing lenses are not motorized). Nikon
D70s is now replaced with
D80. The Nikon
18-135 mm lens offers outstanding
performance and, according to a local
camera store, often far better than the cheaper lenses shipped in other
kits. D70s is a discontinued model and D80 is a great
upgrade for D50.
My brother (who is an advanced photographer) also has a D80 (this is the personal reason) and very happy with the
results. So the combined effect is that I narrowed down my choice to D80. The
internet prices range from $1180
- $1300 but I finally bought it yesterday from CircuitCity.com
for $1214 (not a huge price difference from internet and the store is 5 minutes
drive from my home). Christmas arrived a few days early for me this year
dpreview.com has an in-depth review of the camera (make sure to select different options from the list box). Here is another excellent review from a user and provides comparison with D50/D70 and D200. A non-technical review by a user, although concise, is helpful. D80 Users Group (spanning 140 countries with approx 40,000 photographers visiting daily) has interesting discussions related to the camera. The digital cameras can be compared side-by-side if you are interested in matching the feature sets.
This camera has everything I need:
Watch and learn Digitutor (look for the button on the page) is an excellent interactive tutorial to learn about D80 features. I'll play with the camera over next few days and, in the process, also revise my photography skills.
Technorati: nikon d80 digital photography dslr nikon shopping
Posted by Arun Gupta in photography | Comments[4]
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