Nikon D600: Vollformat in Sparversion

15.11.12
Nikon D600: Vollformat in Sparversion

Im hart umkämpften Markt für digitale Spiegelreflexkameras umtänzeln sich Canon und Nikon wie Preisboxer. Mit ihren neuesten Modellen 6D und D600 versuchen sie, Amateure zum Umstieg auf das 35-mm-“Vollformat” zu bewegen. Ob die D600 den hohen Erwartungen gerecht werden kann, die in den großen Sensor gesetzt werden, zeigt ein Kurztest von ORF.at.

Schon 2010 hat es ein Hersteller geschafft, den Preis einer seiner DSLRs mit "Vollformat"-Sensor (24 x 36 mm) unter die magische Grenze von 2.000 Euro zu drücken: Sony. Dem Modell A850 war trotz zahlreicher Vorzüge leider kein großer Erfolg auf dem Markt beschieden, obwohl sie seinerzeit weniger als ein Drittel von Nikons Topmodell D3X kostete – und beide Geräte um einen 24,6-Megapixel-Sensor derselben Generation von Sony herum gebaut waren.

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Nikon DSLR Models

I sometime see people puzzled about Nikon camera’s model naming convension and the fact, it has been confusing head to toe. My version of explaination is usally like this:

Single digit model are the professional level Three digit models are the secondary professional levels (D100 line up and D700 lineup) Two digit models the consumer levels, but There are several levels (current 3) of ‘consumer’ lineup, and before they knew it it is now a trainwreck. From 2009, they begin to fix this by having: D7000 lineup as ‘prosumer’, highest consumer level D5000 lineup as ‘mid-range’, 2nd consumer level, and D3000 lineup as ‘entry’, the…



David Busch's Nikon D300s, Guide to Digital Slr Photography

525 pages
David Busch’s Nikon D300s, Guide to Digital Slr Photography

Creator: David D. Busch | Photography – 2009-11-02 You needn't hesitate to use ISO 1600 (or even higher) with the Nikon D300s: just don't expect the same results at H1.0 (ISO 6400 … Of course, the 1.5X “crop” factor applies to wideangle lenses, too, so your 20mm ultrawide lens becomes a hum-drum 30mm nearwide-angle, and a … The entry- and mid-level Nikon dSLRs, such as the Nikon D5000, D3000, or D90, are often bought by those new to digital …
Publisher: Muska/Lipman






Nikon to Announce the D5200 within the Next Few Weeks

15.11.12

So D600 isn’t pro because the body is (partially) plastic, but you want a “pro DX”? So if you took the D7000 and put it in an all metal body, then that would be a pro camera and the D600 wouldn’t? The D600 is pro because it’s full frame. “Pro DX” is kind of a contradiction in terms. The FX is primarily what designates it as pro. And yes, I am well aware that people take amazing pics with cropped sensor cameras, but that’s beside the point.

I guess you don’t remember Nikon, saying that there will never be fullframe digital camera and DX is only proper sensor size. Back then, all DX cameras were pro.

DX is somehow a must in sports photography – you can use it instead of teleconverter, DX gives you 1.5x magnication without loosing light (which you loose when you TC). You can use FX camera and crop picture using built-in crop mode, but you loose much of resolution (which is sometimes needed – some agencies will not buy a pic if its smaller then ie 8MP, even if newspaper will print it in poor quality).