Perhaps you have heard about the well known photographers who have been using the professional Nikon D3. Evidently that is part of the Nikon’s grassroots marketing strategy. Rob Galbraith has a collection of full resolution D3 photos at various ISO settings from 200 to 25600 (insane!) taken by professional photographers and shows you how capable the Nikon D3 is. His overall impression on the high ISO performance comparison between the D3 and Canon 1D Mark III:

… while there are differences in the appearance of image graininess - Canon’s grain pattern is tighter - there’s no doubt that the D3 produces a less noisy, higher quality file at ISO 3200 and beyond. This is an incredible achievement on Nikon’s part.

However, it appears the Canon EOS 1D Mark III still shines, perhaps due to its resolution advantage:

On the other hand, EOS-1D Mark III files at any ISO - especially CR2s processed through Canon’s Digital Photo Professional - are generally slightly crisper and more detailed …

I am happy to see a Canon vs. Nikon duel like this. This is market force at its best. Consumers will benefit.

Posted in Digital SLR Cameras on November 17th, 2007. No Comments.

If you are in the market for a new or used lens, the following lens databases may be useful.

Canon mount:

The Lens Database

Canon EOS SLR camera system lenses

Minolta Sony:

Minolta Sony alpha lens database

Konica Minolta official product site

Nikon mount:

Official Nikon Imaging current lens product pageNikon Lens information (serial numbers, specifications, accessories, and summary)

Nikkor Autofocus lenses database

Pentax K-Mount:

Pentax K-Mount Page

Non-specific:

Lens database at photodoto

I am trying to create a one-stop lens database collections for all SLR cameras. Please let me know if you know a good lens database not listed above.

Posted in Digital SLR Cameras, Lens, Online Resources on November 12th, 2007. No Comments.

Nikon has posted some new D300 sample photos. It used to have only two samples a while ago. The maximum ISO setting on the new samples is ISO 400. However you should have plenty of high ISO (unofficial) samples to check out.

Posted in Digital SLR Cameras on November 7th, 2007. No Comments.

There are many articles and opinions about the soon-to-be-released Nikon D3 you can find on the internet but only a few lucky (and good) photographers have had the opportunity to actually use the D3 on a daily basis. Photographer Dave Black spent past three months using the D3 in a variety of shooting situations. Check out this pair of articles: Workshop at the Ranch - New Nikon D3, and On the road - Traveling with Nikon D3. The first article is about sports photography using Nikon D3 at high ISO settings. The second one is about landscape photography and lightpaintings.

While doing research on the D3, I found another photography, Cliff Mautner, also had the chance to shoot the D3 as the only wedding/portrait photographer in the country to have been given the opportunity. Check out the experience and the photos.

Posted in Digital SLR Cameras on November 1st, 2007. No Comments.

According to Nikon Japan press release (English translation), the following sales date are set for Nikon D3, D300, some high end lenses, softwares, and accessories.

  • November 23rd, 2007: Nikon D300, Camera Control Pro 2, Capture NX 1.3.
  • November 30th, 2007: Nikon D3, Wireless transmitter WT-4, AF-S NIKKOR 14-24mm F2.8G ED, AF-S NIKKOR 24-70mm F2.8G ED, AF-S NIKKOR 400mm F2.8G ED VR.
  • January, 2008: AF-S NIKKOR 500mm F4G ED VR, AF-S NIKKOR 600mm F4G ED VR.

As a sale commemoration and a show of being gratuitous, Nikon will conduct a promotion campaign that offers the first 300,000 buyers of D3 and D300 worldwide a free copy of Capture NX 1.3.

Posted in Digital SLR Cameras on October 31st, 2007. No Comments.

According to a news posted on DPReview, Canon has stopped the shipments of its EOS-1D Mark III. No specific reason was give in the DPReview post, but it is most like the auto focus issue that has been discussed extensively since the summer. This news has actually been out quite a few days ago on a SportsShooter forum post. Another UK report is here. A letter sent to dealers from Canon is available here (PDF). Gizmodo has also posted this letter.

Well, it is really a bad timing for Canon as Nikon’s D3 is about to be available soon. Nikon D3 targets the same professional photographers such as photojournalists and sports shooters.

Update on November 1, 2007: Canon has issued an official statement on the issue.

Posted in Digital SLR Cameras on October 31st, 2007. No Comments.

Japanese website ASCII has published an interesting interview (Babelfish translation, Google translation) with Nikon development personal on the development of the Nikon D300, due to be released in November 2007. Here are some interesting points:

  • Targeted customers: Users of both D2X and D200. Personally I think the D300 will appeal to many current D2X users. It costs less with the body and the grip combined than the D2X, with better performances in most aspects. No doubt, many professionals will purchase the full frame D3. However many will find the DX format sufficient.
  • As a flagship DX format DSLR, the three most significant features: 100% viewfinder (need very precise alignment of viewfinder, AF system, and the sensor), durability (150K shutter life), and high shooting speed.
  • High ISO noise performance to be more than 1 stop better than D200, but this is scene dependent. It mentioned that mid tone is brightened a bit, so the images overall has a brighter look.
  • The sensor is supplied by Sony according to Nikon specification and standard. The D300 sensor performs A/D conversion within the sensor to suppress circuit noise that may be generated when the analog signals are transferred to external A/D converter in previous designs. This also allows parallel conversion to improve shooting speed.
  • The active D-lighting function achieves what post-processing does in camera. It is not just a simple tone curve manipulation, but also some localized adjustments, similar to the dodge and burn technique in Photoshop.
  • The sensor has the ability of shooting 8fps but the mechanical parts cannot keep up without the attached battery grip. Without the battery grip, the maximum frame rate drops to 6fps.
  • The mechanical parts like the AF motor are mostly the same as in D200, but the parameters are optimized to increase the shooting speed on D300.
  • The speed improvement over D200: 45ms v. 50ms shutter lag, 90ms vs. 105ms viewfinder blackout time.
  • Apparently the shutter release sounds are also improved by “the mirror balancer”, which reduces mirror bouncing. I guess we can assume less vibration caused blurring when shooting at slow shutter speed.
  • The Italian designer Giorgetto Giugiaro, who was involved in the F3/F4/F5/F6 design, is responsible for the D3 design. While the D300 was designed by in-house designers.
  • Nikon apparently listened to the complains about the durability of the D200 vertical battery grip. It is now constructed in part from magnesium alloy to increase rigidity. The grip is no longer L-shaped. Instead, it becomes flat. One battery remains in the camera and one in the grip. With D200 grip, both batteries go into the grip. It also takes several different types of battery, including AAs.
  • “3D-tracking mode”: When used in auto focus it photometrically utilizes scene recognition technique with the 1005 pixel RGB sensor and a diffraction grating to improve AF accuracy. The sensor maintains the focus by tracking the subject’s color and size. This application does not only scene recognition AF but is also is applied to auto white balance, and to background recognition in flash photography.
  • On Liveview mode: Focus using the actual picture taken by the sensor is the most accurate. In the “tripod shooting mode” of liveview, contrast AF is used to achieve focus. The interviewer asked an interesting question about why contrast AF, popular in compact digital cameras, were not used in DSLRs. The answer is that DSLR sensors cannot capture images with sufficient frame rate. Contrast AF works by doing frame by frame focus finding (maximum contrast). In DSLRs, due to the higher quality requirements, the frame rate with DSLR sensors are too slow. That makes sense that it is only available in tripod shooting mode and, most likely, for still subjects only.
  • On the dust removal: It is the first on Nikon DSLR. It has the vibration dust removal, an anti-static low pass filter with a special coating.

The simultaneous release of two flagship DSLR models D300 and D3, in DX and FX formats, are a significant achievement by Nikon. They reaffirmed the commitments to the DX format. Both formats will be continuous expanded and updated.

[Well, it took me a while to get throw the translations. If I missed anything, please let me know.]

Posted in Digital SLR Cameras on October 30th, 2007. No Comments.

Olympus has officially announced the professional four thirds digital SLR camera E-3. News and rumors of the E-3 were all over the web since this summer (for example, Engadget, DPJournal). As usual, DPReview has all the details as well.

Posted in Digital SLR Cameras on October 16th, 2007. No Comments.
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