Nikon D5300

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Nikon D5300[1]
Type Digital single-lens reflex
Sensor 23.5 mm × 15.6 mm Nikon DX format RGB CMOS sensor, 1.5 × FOV crop
Maximum resolution 6,000 × 4,000 (24.1 effective megapixels)
Lens Interchangeable, Nikon F-mount
Flash Built in Pop-up, Guide number 13m at ISO 100, Standard ISO hotshoe, Compatible with the Nikon Creative Lighting System
Shutter Electronically controlled vertical-travel focal-plane shutter
Shutter speed range 30 s to 1/4000 s in 1/2 or 1/3 stops and Bulb, 1/200 s X-sync
Exposure metering TTL 3D Color Matrix Metering II metering with a 2016-pixel RGB sensor
Exposure modes Auto modes (auto, auto [flash off]), Advanced Scene Modes (Portrait, Landscape, Child, Sports, Close-up, Night Portrait, Night Landscape, Party/Indoor, Beach/Snow, Sunset, Dusk/Dawn, Pet Portrait, Candlelight, Blossom, Autumn Colours, Food), programmed auto with flexible program (P), shutter-priority auto (S), aperture-priority auto (A), manual (M), Special Effects Modes (Night Vision, Colour Sketch, Miniature Effect, Selective Colour, Silhouette, High Key, Low Key).
Metering modes 3D Color Matrix Metering II, Center-weighted and Spot
Focus areas 39-area AF system, Nikon Multi-CAM 4800DX sensor module
Focus modes Instant single-servo (AF-S); continuous-servo (AF-C); auto AF-S/AF-C selection (AF-A); manual (M)
Continuous shooting 5 frames per second
Viewfinder Optical 0.82x, 95% Pentamirror
ASA/ISO range 100–12800 in 1/3 EV steps, up to 25,600 as high-boost.
Custom WB Auto, Incandescent, Fluorescent, Sunlight, Flash, Cloudy, Shade, Preset manual
Rear LCD monitor 81-millimetre (3.2 in) tilt and swivel 1073k-dot LCD screen
Storage Secure Digital, SDHC, SDXC compatible. Supports UHS-I cards.
Battery Nikon EN-EL14 or EN-EL14A Lithium-Ion battery
Weight Approx. 480 g body only
Made in Thailand
Video/movie recording 1920 x 1080, 60/50/30/25/24P (progressive scan), 1280 x 720, 60p/50p, 640 x 424, 30p/25p, 60i (interlaced) (59.94 fields/s)/50i (50 fields/s), ; High or Normal bitrate modes

The Nikon D5300 is an F-mount DSLR as successor to the Nikon D5200 with a new carbon-fiber-reinforced polymer body[2] and other new technologies,[3][4] announced by Nikon on October 17, 2013.[5] It features the new Expeed 4 processor and is the company's first DSLR with built-in Wi-Fi and GPS. It shares the same 24 megapixel image sensor as the D5200, but without Anti-aliasing (AA) filter, equal to the Nikon D7100. MSRP for body-only is $800 and with kit 18-140mm f/3.5-5.6 is $1,400.[6]

Feature list

  • Expeed 4 with lower power consumption; extended battery life to 600 shots
  • Full HD video 1080p with autofocus also in uncompressed video (clean HDMI) format. Nikon's first DSLR with 60p/50p framerate at full HD resolution (several previous Nikon bodies supported 60p/50p, but only at 720p)
  • GPS inbuilt
  • WLAN (Wi-Fi) inbuilt
  • Automatic correction of lateral chromatic aberration for JPEGs. Correction-data is additionally stored in RAW-files and used by Nikon Capture NX, View NX and some other RAW tools.
  • No Anti-aliasing (AA) filter
  • New pentamirror with 0.82x magnification and 95% frame coverage
  • 9 Special Effects
  • Active D-Lighting (4 level and auto).
  • Bracketing (exposure, Active D-Lighting and white-balance).
  • In camera HDR mode.
  • Inbuilt time-lapse photography intervalometer
  • Quiet shooting mode.
  • Built-in sensor cleaning system (vibrating low-pass filter) and airflow control system.
  • HDMI HD video output.
  • Enhanced built-in RAW processing with extended Retouch menu for image processing without using a computer: D-Lighting, Red-eye reduction, Trimming, Monochrome & filter effects, Color balance, Image overlay, NEF (RAW) processing, Quick retouch, Straighten, Distortion control, Fisheye, Color outline, Color sketch, Perspective control, Miniature effect, Selective Color, Edit movie, Side-by-side comparison.
  • Stereo microphone input (has stereo built-in mic)
  • 3.2-inch (81 mm) articulated 1073k-dot vari-angle LCD.
  • EN-EL14 or EN-EL14A Lithium-ion Battery.
  • Slightly smaller and lighter body (480g)

Like Nikon's other consumer level DSLRs, the D5300 has no in-body autofocus motor, and fully automatic autofocus requires one of the currently 162 lenses with an integrated autofocus motor. With any other lenses the camera's electronic rangefinder (which indicates if the subject inside the selected focus point is in focus or not) can be used to manually adjust focus.[7][8]

The D5300 can mount unmodified A-lenses (also called Non-AI, Pre-AI or F-type) with support of the electronic rangefinder and without metering.

See also

  • List of Nikon F-mount lenses with integrated autofocus motors

References

External links

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