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Nikon wireless mobile utility full resolution
Nikon wireless mobile utility full resolution











nikon wireless mobile utility full resolution
  1. Nikon wireless mobile utility full resolution movie#
  2. Nikon wireless mobile utility full resolution 1080p#

The effect provides the D7100 with a cleaner, more modern profile which it shares with other recent models like the D5200. The changes to the body shape are most evident from the front, with the transition from the front to the top panel now via a bevelled edge that sweeps around the side of the viewfinder head in an elegant curve. The front infra-red receiver is in the same place, but it has a more interesting shape. On the other side of the lens mount the layout is exactly as before with flash and bracket buttons near the top and the focus mode switch lower down beneath the lens release button. These are just the default functions though, as before, both are programmable, so if you’re upgrading you can easily set them up the way you’re used to having them.

nikon wireless mobile utility full resolution

The topmost one is now marked Pv and the one lower down, positioned for your left index finger is marked Fn1. The AF assist lamp on the D7100 is a little larger and beneath it on the right side of the lens mount (as you hold the camera) the depth of field preview and function buttons have swapped position. On the front panel there are also some minor changes. As before there’s a control dial positioned in front of and below the shutter release on the front of the grip.

Nikon wireless mobile utility full resolution movie#

On the viewfinder head new stereo mics are mounted just in front of the hotshoe and on the top of the grip there’s a new direct movie recording button (which works in Live view only) in addition to the shutter release and on/off collar switch, metering mode and exposure compensation buttons. There’s also a minor change to the drive mode dial which drops the remote shooting position. The most obvious physical differences are on the top plate where the Mode dial gains the same central locking button as on the D600. Practically speaking, they feel pretty much the same weight in your hand. The body styling is the same and at a casual glance they look almost identical, but in your hand the D7100 feels slightly more substantial with a grip that’s a little larger and more contoured. This makes it 4mm wider, 2mm taller and roughly the same thickness as the D7000, and 15g lighter. The D7100 measures 136x107x76mm and weighs 765g without battery. Many thanks to Park Cameras in the UK for the loan of a D7000 for our comparative tests. It’ll be interesting to see how much of a quality difference there is between these two models. The D5200 lacks the D7100’s robust build quality, many of its physical controls and a lot of its features, but crucially, it shares the same 24 Megapixel resolution, albeit retaining an optical low-pass filter. In my review I’ve compared the D7100 with its predecessor which remains a great value option for those looking for an upper-mid-range DSLR and also with the mid-range D5200. The D800e did this by cancelling-out the effect, but the D7100 simply removes the filter altogether. Better still, the D7100 now sports full weather-sealing, and becomes the company’s second DSLR after the D800e to eliminate the effect of an optical low pass filter for potentially sharper images.

Nikon wireless mobile utility full resolution 1080p#

The new D7100 inherits the 100% viewfinder coverage, 6fps continuous shooting, 2016 pixel metering sensor and twin SD card slots of its predecessor, but increases the resolution by 50% to 24.1 Megapixels, boosts the AF system from 39 to 51-points, adds 1080p at 30 and 25 fps along with 24fps, and introduces a 1.3x crop mode resulting in an overall field-reduction of two times at a resolution of 15.4 Megapixels. I’d say it’s looking increasingly unlikely there’ll be a D400 and the message from Nikon is that if you want a semi-pro model nowadays, you should be looking at one with a full-frame sensor.īut as with previous models, Nikon continues to push the boundaries of what we can expect from an upper mid-range body, blurring the line with the semi-pro category. To be fair, most of the specifications are now comfortably beyond that of the D300s, but the D7100 is firmly in the enthusiast rather than semi-pro category. Nikon describes the D7100 as being the best that DX can offer, although it’s important to note this is not the long-awaited semi-pro replacement for the D300s. Nikon intends to keep the older D7000 in the current line-up. Announced in February 2013, roughly two and a half years after the D7000, it slots between that model and the D600 in the range. The Nikon D7100 is the company’s latest upper mid-range DSLR aimed at enthusiasts and aspiring photographers.













Nikon wireless mobile utility full resolution