Mid-Range DSLR Nikon D7000 The Review

Mid-Range DSLR Nikon D7000 The Review
The D7000 is Nikon's latest mid-range DSLR company. Announced in September 2010, D7000 technically replaces the D90 is very popular, although the model will still sold while stocks last. The new numbering clearly above the position at D7000 D5000, with D3100 under both.

 As before D90, Nikon has put the latest technology in D7000 without ignoring the wishes of traditional photographers. The resolution has been increased from 12.3 to 16.2 Megapixels, while the movie mode now captures Full HD 1080p at 24fps with support for autofocus while filming. Continuous shooting has accelerated from 4.5 to 6fps and viewfinder coverage increased to 100% for 96% previously.

 11 The point is D90's AF system has been pushed to the new 39-point, while the metering now employs 2016 pixel RGB sensor rather than the previous system of 420 pixels. Nikon D7000-ups are also tough to use in magnesium alloy top and back plate, while the D90 is plastic all, and now there are dual SD card memory slot.

This is an impressive specification that provides a big step-up from entry-level model of such D5000 and Canon EOS 550D Rebel T2i /, but a big change from the era of the D90 is the Canon now has a new rival to the D7000 is positioned directly in the form of the EOS 60D. In our full review we will directly compare the design, features, performance and quality of new D7000 against both D90 and its predecessor the EOS 60D's.