Nikon D7000 review
Design
Nikon D7000 review - Design
Although a fair amount behind the scenes is new, the look and feel of the D7000 is still very much a Nikon at heart.
The camera's layout comprises a light-up display panel to the top right, with a mode dial and surrounding drive mode dial to the opposite left hand side. To adjust the drive mode a small button requires pressing to release the dial lock - this can prove a little fiddly despite a raised, textured edge, yet is no different to previous Nikon body designs.
For control of most key options the D7000 adopts a dual thumbwheel system, which makes quick-adjusting manual controls a breeze. Both thumbwheels are well positioned on the front and rear right-hand side of the camera and fall well to the hand.
Nikon D7000 review sample image - click for full size gallery
On the rear is the main LCD screen centerpiece and, although there seems to be demand for vari-angle screens of late, the D7000 opts for a traditional fixed-screen. The viewfinder above this has a 0.94 magnification and as such is fairly large to the eye but would benefit from a more pronounced eye cup to fully seal off external light and lock around the eye more smoothly.
A plethora of function-type buttons around the camera body also come good in use: to the front left side of the flash is a BKT (bracket) button; a Depth of Field Preview button is to the front of the camera by the lens base; the Fn (Function) button can be found above this to the top right of the lens; exposure compensation and metering selection have their own individual buttons next to the shutter release; and three of the four main buttons to the rear left can be pressed and held for further quick adjustment of the major options. In short, you're never far from quick and easy control.





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Latest comments
August 18 19:36
Lee Miles
Hi Ashley I have not used the D3 so I am not really the right person to ask but to my mind the D3 is a professional camera and the D7000 is a top end amateur. Most professional gear I have tried is built to take a bashing but you have to pay for that build quality and of course the D3 is a full frame Although now a bit long in the tooth if I was a professional between the 2 I would go for the D3 as I would need that reliability, but having said that I have noticed a number of pro Nikon users are starting to carry the D7000 as a backup or snatch shot camera . And having looked carefully at the results from both cameras the difference is not much. I would say the D3 with the same lens is a tad crisper due to the full frame sensor but in low light the D7000 is almost identical & on a gallery wall unless they are side by side at A3+ the difference takes enough working out to make (IMO) the D7000 a good choice up to serious club or exhibition level
December 11 23:00
Steve Weir
I've had a D7000 for about a year. Great camera, intuitive menu and controls. This camera does overexpose in bright conditions. I usually dial in exposure compensation. In addition, Nikon are stingy with their firmware updates. They should give it a 5 shot HDR capability and the ability to shoot HD video at 30fps. Otherwise, it's a good camera.
December 28 10:42
Harold Williams Rogers
I have had a D7000 for a few months now for a replacement to the D80, it was expensive, but it is worth every penny, they have really thought of everything, even being able to take stadard AI lenses and still give auto exposure, so all my old Nikon and Tamron AI lenses work great, so I tend to use my old Nikor 1.4 50mm lens for fantastic image quality, I canr really fault this camera
February 03 19:15
james hamilton-bird
I bought one after reading the reviews of a great Nikon that's new on the block. being a Nikon user since my F2 in 1960 I am biased because in all those years not once was I let down. Going to test it with the ED 700-300 mm in 10 shots or captures if you prefer I got 2 publications in the press. I have found that it could have been a fraction bigger but if you have not been used to a larger Camera it would not be a problem. I resolved this by adding a battery grip The Sensor is quite advanced at the price. I see Nikon do not put it in their Pro camera group but I also see a few pros adding it to their bags as a second or third body as I have. No camera is perfect but to date I have yet to find anything that has made me regret it's purchase the D700 stays at home it's that good for samples go to www.flickr.com/photos/birdseyeviewphotos look at the Swan pics.