![]() ![]() ![]() Shooting is quite nippy for a budget camera, whipping out 3 frames per second in continuous shooting mode (buffer: 6 raw, unlimited JPEG), powered by Nikon’s Expeed image processing engine. The camera comes with a 3″ fixed LCD monitor (with a low res 230k pixels), image sensor cleaning (sensor shake and ‘airflow’) with the ISO range covering 100-1600 (100-3200 expanded). Seeing as Nikon are targeting consumers looking to upgrade from compacts, leaving out LiveView is a baffling omission to our eyes. Inside, there’s the same sensor as the D60, but Nikon have dumped the earlier bog-standard 3-point AF system and replaced it with the same 11-point system seen in the D90.Ĭrucially, there’s no live view or video modes in the D3000, which may seriously disappoint users and send them scuttling off in the direction of other budget offerings. The D3000 retains the stripped down look of its predecessor, with no top mounted LCD and a minimum of knobs and buttons on the body, making a fairly small and attractive camera. Replacing the D60 – Nikon’s best-selling DLSR – the d3000 follows the same ethos of serving up a user-friendly package designed to guide nervous newbies into the world of dSLR photography, with a new ‘guide’ mode and a ton of auto features onboard to help make snapping pics a cinch. Flapping its arms around and hoping to attract mobs of festive buyers in the hugely competitive budget dSLR market is Nikon’s new D3000 camera. ![]()
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