Nikon D810 is a great camera,what else is there to say.
Great camera.It's everything I wanted and more
None
Nikon D810 is a great camera,what else is there to say.
Great camera.It's everything I wanted and more
None
Purchased the D810 as a backup for my D750. Now it seems the 750 is destined to be the backup. The 810 is easy to use and operate! Perfect for landscape and gets me in the wilderness every weekend. Allows me to spend less time setting up the camera, and more time shooting in the woods.
I continue to receive an error message FEE with all my Prime Lens! Although I move to the lowest Aperture it continues to give me the error message!
I have been a Pro photographer for 40 years and the Nikon D810 has the all the quality of meduim format. The facial recognition feature and the quiet shutter operation has dramatic improved function. The 5 to 7 frames per second also increases use for sport photographers.
The Nikon D810 certainly has its weaknesses, but in the categories that it is known for excelling, it is still among the most relevant cameras, even when considering the release of the D850. Pros - Exceptional resolution, image quality, and sharpness!
It may not have every trendy feature under the sun, but there's no arguing with the Nikon D810's superb performance and image quality.
Superb image quality and dynamic range; Great handling and control; Super-fast focusing
No 4K video; Missing a few extra features; Not a huge improvement over D800E
Landmark cameras come along every once in a while. In 2012 it was the super-high-resolution Nikon D800 that astounded us. We couldn't quite believe how much this 36.3-megapixel full-frame beast defied our initially doubtful expectations.
Huge images can offer epic quality; sturdy weather-sealed build; excellent autofocus system in single or continuous autofocus
Where's the 4K video?; single SD slot (single CF slot); slower shutter speed deficiencies are amplified due to resolution
The Nikon D810 is the camera that replaces the classic D800 and D800E. It's a full-frame 36.3-megapixel camera that offers some of the best images you can get from any DSLR. Nikon claims it produces the finest photos of any of its cameras, ever.
Fantastic image quality; Fast and accurate autofocus; Superb dynamic range
No inbuilt Wi-Fi; No 4K video capture; Not a huge upgrade over the D800E
In the spring of 2012, Nikon announced two of the highest-resolution DSLRs ever made – the D800 and D800E. These cameras are practically identical, the only difference being that the effect of the optical low-pass filter is cancelled out in the D800E.
36.3-million-pixel; full-frame sensor; No optical low-pass filter; Fast; accurate 51-point AF system
Large file size at full resolution; Heavy and sizeable build
Nikon's D800 and D800E caused great excitement when they were first announced in February 2012 largely because of their groundbreaking 36 million pixel count. These two full-frame DSLR cameras are identical apart from the fact that the D800E's sensor has a weaker anti-aliasing (AA) or optical...
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