Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Nikon D600 review


We have always favored a Nikon design - modern and serious, even the D600 is no exception. The materials used are great and we just rubber grip which is covered recalls that this was not the strongest Nikon model (the D800 is still softer and more comfortable to hold).
Ergonomics is very similar to the cheaper D7000 model and basically have no significant objections. Available to the greater amount of external control and stop buttons for various functions. The only detail that some users might disturb the relatively thin grip - unsuitable for those with larger hands. The menu is viewed in Nikon Traditional style, but we still lack the ability to shooting RAW files with a lower resolution (like the Canon).

An optical viewfinder is very large and has a 100% frame coverage. The LCD screen is 3.2 inches with 921,000 pixels and a very detailed and bright, but not rotated. Battery life varies markedly depending on usage. With a lot of ignition LCD display and imaging in live-view mode will withstand about 500 photos. If completely refrain from playback, the battery can provide as much as 1200 photos, and would we concluded that a realistic average of 600-700 photos. Photos and video are recorded on two SD cards with a choice of several methods of simultaneous operation. A number of connectors such as USB, HDMI output, a microphone input and a headphone output for monitoring ... WiFi connectivity and GPS are optional, unfortunately.
Full-frame sensor with 24 megapixels in the top of the current deals on the market and at this point you have nothing to speculate - if quality is your most important photos, please purchase. The quality of photos we have nothing much to philosophize: superior. By all parameters of quantity (lack of) noise at high ISO settings, color reproduction, and to the possibility of rescuing shadow or bright parts in RAW format, the D600 is a narrow circle of several best camera today. We tested the D600 with its kit lens - 24-85 f/3.5-4.5 G VR. Although quite decent quality, we believe that the D600 come to the fore only with the use of prime lenses, such as the 28/1.8G, 50/1.8G or 85/1.8G., And it is this trio recommend as ideal for most applications.

Full HD video is a superior look and D600 has an uncompressed output via HDMI connector. The ability to record time-lapse movies we also really liked.

In the end, we only have to repeat the same words in the introduction: Excellent picture quality has never been better. D600 is able to do almost any job, portraits, weddings, landscapes, editorials, your cat napping in front of the fireplace ... all can. The only applications that may not be the perfect sport (we're talking about professional work) due to the narrow coverage of AF points. For amateurs, D600 is in our opinion the top offers that makes sense to buy, any more expensive (D800, 5D MKII) is not profitable as they do not offer in accordance with the larger shift in quality.












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