|
|
Nikon D80 review at PhotographyBLOG
Mark Peters : January 3th 2007 - 21:21 CET
|
|
|
Nikon D80 review at PhotographyBLOG : DIWA member Mark Goldstein from PhotographyBLOG has reviewed the Nikon D80 camera. The Nikon D80 features a new 10.2 effective Megapixel DX Format CCD image sensor, bringing a new level of high resolution and sharp detail to the class whilst also providing plenty of freedom to crop creatively and print enlargements. One of the key advances developed for the D80 is Nikon's own high-resolution image processing engine. Advantages inherited from Nikon's latest professional DSLR cameras include color independent analog pre-conditioning and high-precision 12-bit digital image processing algorithms, which combine to produce natural-looking images that benefit from faithful color and tone reproduction.
|

Nikon D80 Review - Image sensor
According to Mark Goldstein: "The Nikon D80 sports a large 10.2MP CCD DX format sensor (3,872 x 2,592 pixels) that won’t disappoint even the most passionate quality fanatics. Capturing images as high-resolution jpeg at 300ppi means that they can be printed out at 32.78x21.95cm and it stretched to A3 size without any noticeable image degradation. Once images are printed at A3, a close inspection reveals that there is superb definition, colour depth and saturation in the Nikon image file."
Nikon D80 digital SLR - ISO and Sensitivity
Mark continues: "The Nikon D80 has an ISO spectrum from 100-1600 and offers an H function that enables the ISO to be boosted to 3200. At its lowest settings it produces noise free captures and even up to ISOs under 1000, electronic interference is still incredible minor. It is only at the highest 3200 setting that there are obvious signs of noise and overall performance is first class. The extra burst of light that the pop-up flash provides is more than adequate." You want to learn more about the Nikon digital SLR camera? Continue to read the Nikon D80 review at PhotographyBLOG.
About PhotographyBLOG
Mark Goldstein started his very active website PhotographyBLOG in January 2003. At first the one and only purpose was to let this site function as one of those popular web logs with Photography as main topic. But as we all know Photography is a pretty big subject to publish about so Mark decided to focus on some hot key points like mentioning all new introductions, reviews, reports from events like PMA and Photokina, sharing some impressive and creative photos and Mark's sole perspective of his feeling about this fascinating world of Digital Imaging. Mark is based in the UK, but his eagle-eye focuses global.
|
   
|
|
|