Nikon D750 Full width Extended

(7 customer reviews)

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Cameras like the Nikon D500 are not intended to lure you in with flashy extras, though, or to provide the sort of speed pro action shooters are after. Instead, you get solid everyday speed that actually falls slightly below several rival CSCs at the price, at this point.

The software side of the Nikon D500 Wi-Fi also wipes the floor with that of most other manufacturers. As well as transferring images and controlling the shutter remotely, you can alter camera settings like aperture, shutter speed and ISO from your mobile phone or tablet. Not bad, right?

There’s also a small pop-up flash, again giving you a sense of having all you need to get on with, adding to the Nikon D500’s accessibility.

 What is the Nikon D750?

The Nikon D500 is a DSLR that, while not bottom-rung like the EOS 1200D, is reasonably affordable, and offers simple operation that’ll appeal to those who don’t want to get knee-deep into the manual side of photography. It gets you the DSLR benefits of lens choice and good image quality, without the daunting learning curve.

The DIGIC 6 processor lets you shoot at 5fps, which has become the bog-standard speed level for any self-respecting everyday DSLR. It’s the same speed as the 700D too. What has changed, though, is the buffer. The 8-frame RAW file limit may not sound impressive, but being able to shoot up to 940 JPEGs in burst does.

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If you’re keen to dive right into some of the more advanced principles of photography, also consider the Nikon D500, which has the same insides but more manual controls.

Want to keep it simple? The only serious issue with the Nikon D500 is that it doesn’t offer as good dynamic range as its rivals, the Nikon D5500 and Pentax K-S2.

50D: Design and Handling

If jaw-dropping, dynamic style is high on your camera priority list, you’re unlikely to come to a DSLR for it. The Nikon D500 has the classic DSLR look, with a chunky black body that most people will only be able to set apart from other entry-level models by looking at the name badge.

It’s practical, not a preener.

Being a lower-end model, the Nikon D500’s outer parts are polycarbonate rather than magnesium alloy, which is only found on rather more expensive models. It doesn’t feel ultra-high-end, then, but its still tough.

There’s no creaking or warping of the parts that make up the Nikon D500’s shell, and it has an aluminium skeleton underneath the plastic to help keep everything rigid. A slightly lower-end construction also helps keep the camera light.

It’s 25g lighter than its predecessor the Nikon D500, and feels nicely low-heft for a DSLR

It’s 25g lighter than its predecessor the Nikon D500, and feels nicely low-heft for a DSLR, without getting rid of the large hand grip. The next step would be to add weatherproofing to more affordable cameras like the Nikon D500, but that’s not here yet. This is still reserved for Canon’s more expensive cameras.

A light, polycarbonate body camera may become a disadvantage if you’re looking to mount giant fast lenses, but if you want to sample some of Canon’s cheaper high-quality options like the bargain 50mm f1.8 lens, they’ll suit the Nikon D500 perfectly.

What’s rather more specific to the Nikon D500 is a very laid-back control style. It has just the single manual control wheel up on the top plate, and a very easy-to-reach mode dial.

This style is a total opposite to the 750D’s brother, the Nikon D500. That model is roughly £50 more and gets you more manual controls plus an extra display on the top plate, for a much more ‘pro’ feel.

If you think your next camera is likely to be a stepping stone onto more serious photography and, one day, a real top-end DSLR, the 760D is a much better bet. Think you’ll stay best friends with the Auto mode? There’s no shame in picking the Nikon D500. By cutting down on the number of controls has been able to make the few that do feature very easy to access. This camera is easy to use, and — let’s not overstate the matter — does still give you plenty of manual control if you’re after it.

The mode dial features priority modes that let you control one main element such as aperture or shutter speed, letting the camera sort of the rest to best suit that setting. We use these easy manual modes about 90 per cent of the time.

Nikon D500: Screen and EVF

The Nikon D500 provides all the basics when it comes to previewing and reviewing your images. There’s a 3-inch vari-angle display on the back whose panel is the same found on the 700D. It’s a 1.04-million-dot Clear View II LCD, with a 3:2 aspect to match the camera’s sensor. Touchscreen support means you can pick your focus point with a finger when using Live View too.

Fitting in perfectly with the camera’s fairly easy style, the Nikon D500 screen tilts out and up/down to make seeing what you’re shooting when holding the camera above or below your head easy. And at all sorts of odd angles. It’s a smooth, high-quality vari-angle mechanism.

DSLR vs Mirrorless - 5 Reasons to Buy a Nikon D500

My first 5 Reasons video ever was on switching to mirrorless. This one is about switching back to a DSLR.And not just any DSLR. A serious, crazy bang for the buck image making monster. I bought...

Unlike most DSLRs, there’s also not a huge performance penalty for using the LCD rather than the viewfinder to preview the image, called Live View in photography circles. As the Nikon D500 uses on-sensor phase detection pixels rather than stepping right down to pure contrast detection software AF, it stays quick.

The one complaint we do have is about the viewfinder, not the screen. Being a cheaper model, it only offers 95 per cent coverage of the frame, meaning the shot will actually capture a bit more than you can see through the viewfinder. That’s the same coverage as the Nikon D5500, although the similarly-priced Pentax K-S2 manages 100 per cent coverage.

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Mastering the Nikon D750

Mastering the Nikon D750

Rocky Nook, Inc.. 2015

Specification: Nikon D750 Full width Extended

Exposure Compensation

1/3, 1/2 or 1 EV in Steps of -5 to +5 EV

SLR Variant

(Body only)

Type

DSLR

Color

Black

Lens Mount

Nikon F Mount (With AF Coupling and AF Contacts)

image-sensor-size

36.0 x 24.0

Wifi

Yes

Tripod Socket

Yes

Accessory Shoe

ISO 518 Hot-shoe with Sync and Data Contacts and Safety Lock

Temperature

0°C – 40°C

Sensor Type

CMOS

iso-rating

ISO 100 – 51200

effective-pixels-mp

20.9

Brand Color

Black

Dust Reduction

Yes

View Finder

Yes

Other Viewfinder Features

Reflex Mirror: Quick Return Type, Depth-of-field Preview: Yes, Pressing Pv Button Stops Lens Aperture Down to Value Selected by User (A and M Modes) or by Camera (P and S Modes), Viewfinder Eye Point: 16 mm (–1.0 m (sup (-1)) from Center Surface of Viewfinder Eyepiece Lens)

View Finder Type

Eye-level Pentaprism Single-lens Reflex Viewfinder

Viewfinder Coverage

Frame Coverage (DX (24 x 16) Image Area: 100% Horizontal and 100% Vertical, 1.3x (18 x 12) Image Area: 98% Horizontal and 98% Vertical)

Model Number

D500 (Body Only)

Other Lens Features

Lens Aperture: Instant Return, Electronically Controlled, Compatible Lenses: Compatible with AF NIKKOR Lenses, Including Type G, E, and D Lenses (Some Restrictions Apply to PC Lenses) and DX Lenses, AI-P NIKKOR Lenses and Non-CPU AI Lenses (Exposure Modes A and M Only), IX NIKKOR Lenses, Lenses for the F3AF and Non-AI Lenses can not be Used, The Electronic Rangefinder can be Used with Lenses that Have a Maximum Aperture of f/5.6 or Faster (The Electronic Rangefinder Supports 15 Focus Points with Lenses that Have a Maximum Aperture of f/8 or Faster, of Which 9 Points are Available for Selection)

Viewfinder Magnification

1.0 x (50 mm f/1.4 Lens at Infinity, –1.0 m (sup (-1)))

Auto Focus

Yes

Manual Focus

Yes

Focus Points

153, 153 Focus Points of which 55 or 15 are Available for Selection

White Balancing

Auto (3 Types), Incandescent, Fluorescent (7 Types), Direct Sunlight, Flash, Cloudy, Shade, Preset Manual (Upto 6 Values can be Stored, Spot White Balance Measurement Available During Live view), Choose Color Temperature (2500 K to 10000 K), All with Fine-tuning, Bracketing Types: Exposure, Flash, White Balance, ADL

Viewpoint Dioptric Adjustment

-2 to +1 m (sup (-1))

Metering Modes

Programmed Auto with Flexible Program (P), Shutter-priority Auto (S), Aperture-priority Auto (A), Manual (M)

Other Focus Features

Focal Length in 35 mm (135) Format Equivalent to 1.5x that of Lenses with FX Format Angle of View, Detection Range: ‚Äì4 to +20 EV (ISO 100, 20°C), AF-area Mode: Single-point AF, 25, 72 or 153-point Dynamic-area AF, 3D-tracking, Group-area AF, Auto-area AF, Focus Lock: Focus can be Locked by Pressing Shutter-release Button Halfway (Single-servo AF) or by Pressing the Center of the Sub-selector

Depth

81

Flash Compensation

1/3, 1/2 or 1 EV in Steps of -3 to +1 EV

Other Exposure Features

Metering System: TTL Exposure Metering Using RGB Sensor with Approximately 180 K (180,000) Pixels, Exposure Lock: Luminosity Locked at Detected Value

shutter-speed

1/8000 – 30 sec

Video Format

MOV, H.264, MPEG-4 Advanced Video Coding

Live View Shooting

Yes

Other Shutter Features

Approximate Frame Advance Rate: 10 fps, CL: 1 to 9 fps, CH: 10 fps, QC: 3 fps, Speed: 1/8000 to 30 sec in Steps of 1/3, 1/2 or 1 EV, Bulb, Time, X250

Shutter Type

Electronically-controlled Vertical Travel Focal-plane Mechanical Shutter, Electronic Front-curtain Shutter Available in Mirror Up Release Mode

Other Flash Features

Control (TTL: i-TTL Flash Control Using RGB Sensor with Approximately 180 K (180,000) Pixels, i-TTL Balanced Fill-flash for Digital SLR is Used with Matrix, Center-weighted and Highlight-weighted Metering, Standard i-TTL Fill-flash for Digital SLR with Spot Metering, Flash-ready Indicator: Lights when Optional Flash Unit is Fully Charged, Flashes After Flash is Fired at Full Output

Flash Modes

Front-curtain Sync, Slow Sync, Rear-curtain Sync, Red-eye Reduction, Red-eye Reduction with Slow Sync, Slow Rear-curtain Sync, Off, Auto FP High-Speed Sync Supported

Image Format

File Format (NEF (RAW): 12 or 14 bit (Lossless Compressed, Compressed or Uncompressed), Large, Medium and Small Available (Medium and Small Images are Recorded at a bit Depth of 12 bits Using Lossless Compression), TIFF (RGB), JPEG: JPEG-baseline Compliant with Fine (1 : 4), Normal (1 : 8) or Basic (1 : 16) Compression, Optimal Quality Compression Available, NEF (RAW)+JPEG: Single Photograph Recorded in Both NEF (RAW) and JPEG Formats

video-resolution

1280 x 720

Self-timer

Yes

Manual Exposure

Yes

Other Audio Features

Audio Recording Device: Built-in Stereo or External Microphone, Sensitivity Adjustable

Other Display Features

Effective Angle of View: Nikon DX Format, Image Sensor Format: DX, Monitor: Tilting TFT Touch Sensitive LCD with 100% Frame Coverage and Manual Monitor Brightness Control

Height

147

Compatible Card

SD Card

Battery Type

Lithium Battery

AE Lock/Exposure Lock

Yes

Touch Screen

Yes

Number of Batteries

1

weight

860

Display Size

3.2

Warranty Summary

2 Years Warranty

Service Type

Carry in

Width

115

Ports

HDMI

7 reviews for Nikon D750 Full width Extended

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  1. theaprum01

    The Nikon D750 feels just right, not flimsy like my Nikon D5100. The main selling point for me is the 50% wider angle that all FX camera captures. I love my 35mm f1.8 and the only thing I wish could be better is that the picture gets wider. And I hardly uses my 50mm f1.8 at all because it’s just too narrow for me. Now on the D750, I absolutely love the pictures coming from my 35mm and I am pulling out my 50mm as well now that its images is 50% wider. I am able to get a more shallow depth of field on FX so my portrait is much more eye catching with more interesting background blur than before. And for landscape, the much wider angle that I am able to capture is worth the upgrade alone. Another part I like about the camera is its superior low light performance. With my 50mm and 35mm f1.8, there are few situations where I need the flash. I also low the wide dynamic range of this camera. In all my photographs now, the picture looks right and one look at the histogram confirms it. And I am really thankful that Nikon makes DX lens compatible with FX camera. I do very little wildlife photography so I am fine using my 18-200mm DX lens on this body. It does not bother me that I have to set the camera to DX mode and let it crop. I always crop my wildlife photograph anyway.

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  2. nadeem.auction

    I shopped around but got a great deal from these guys. This entire bundle cost me what the camera alone would cost, so everything else was just a bonus. I found the Nikon D750 camera exceeded my expectations and is a very versatile and highly functional unit. I look forward to using it for years to come.

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  3. supervendor

    Great

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  4. maculas

    A great step up from the D7000. I hav only got to play a little but there was immediate improvement over my prior camera.

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  5. rickston46523

    Great Full Frame cam because of size. One for the smallest foot prints in FF (full frame) for better handling and deeper grip. Now at a great price as of Dec 2019. Not as taxing on lenses because of the 24mpg count vs the d810, d850. So if you own some mid to upper ranges lenses like say the 50mm 1.8 FX G or a 24mm 2.8 D or a 28-300 VR the sensor will be kinder to these types of lenses. The focus is fast and accurate and low light High ISO shots are actually better that the d810. The cam has an anti-alias filter which bucks the trend on Nikon cams that don’t have them namely the d7200 d500 d800E, d810 and so on. For my needs I shoot a lot of old style architecture which some have horizontal lines and the filter helps keep them straight in this regard. if you are coming to FF and from say at d71,7200 this cam will we seem at home to you as its button and dials are laid out the same. If you are contemplating FF this is the way to go if your into Nikon system and are looking to buy on the cheap. I call this a gap camera because it been around since introduced in 2014 and it will give you spectacular pics and I don’t think its necessary to have to step up to the d810 or d850. Its prices used at this time around $800 while the d810 36 mpg is selling in excellent condition around $1200. when buying used pay attention to shutter count. Bottom line is larger format cams will in most cases produce cleaner, crisper, better detailed pic than APSc sensor cams. I my opinion better looking over all. Been around this hobby/pro business 60 years and worked in many formats. Hope this helps you out in deciding. Mean while keep snapping that shutter!

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  6. j_franc

    Perfect set as my first professional camera set. Takes tack sharp pictures, and easy to use after a small learning curve. Highly recommend!

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  7. kid2475

    Great camera to use, it takes awesome pictures day and night, taking pictures of lightning and storm clouds is on a new level for me. Prior to this I was using a D5300 with an assortment of lenses, so with the jump to the D750 I’ve found It can do everything that camera can do and more.

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    Nikon D750 Full width Extended
    Nikon D750 Full width Extended

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