Nikon D70 is an easy to use 6 megapixel digital SLR camera with intelligently implemented features that can delivers relevant and really useful features. The camera also has a solid and well designed body, speedy performance, powerfull battery, and good photo quality. The D70’s images are some of the best dSLR. They’re sharp, with excellent exposure and dynamic range, accurate colors, neutral white balance, extremely low noise levels, and practically no fringing or other artifacts. The price is in direct competition with the Canon EOS 300D, but the D70 feature is similar to models such as the Nikon D100 and the Canon EOS 10D.
The camera is a handful, but it’s not really heavy by dSLR standards, and its moulded-plastic, solid feeling body offers a very comfortable grip. The weight is about 1.1kg equipped with a CompactFlash card, a lithium-ion battery, and an 18mm-70mm lens.
The D70’s buttons and dials are intelligently distributed, and various combinations of them will give you access to almost every function. And the operation of some of the external controls is programmable within the menu system.
Novice user can simply enjoy the ergonomics of manual zoom and focus instead of using fully automatic mode. More ambitious photographers can take advantage of Nikon’s sophisticated Vari Program scene modes, which optimise not only the usual shutter speed and aperture but also sharpness, colour intensity, contrast, and more. If you want to go a little further with the settings, the D70 gives you a choice of basic or advanced customisation. In addition, Nikon offers you subtle operational control over all these features.
There are manual and semimanual exposure modes, and shutter speeds range from 30 seconds to 1/8,000 of a second. You can choose from automatic, preset, and manual white-balance options, as well as spot, centre weighted, and 3D colour matrix metering. You’ll also find exposure, flash, and white-balance bracketing and continuous predictive 5-point autofocus.
Nikon D70 works with a wide array of Speedlight external flashes and Nikon F-mount lenses, though naturally, you’ll benefit most from the latest and greatest versions. The typical shutter lag was a minimal 0.4 second, and takes approximately 0.6 second from power-on to the first snap. It takes less than 1 second for high-quality JPEG photos and a little bit more for RAW files, shot-to-shot time was closer to average, and the lengthy flash recycle dragged it out to 3 seconds.
The camera light-sensitivity range begins at a high ISO 200, and it can produces surprisingly good photos even at its maximum setting of ISO 1,600.
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