Nikon Df

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Nikon Df
Type Digital single-lens reflex camera
Sensor 36.0 mm × 23.9 mm CMOS, Nikon FX format, 7.3µm pixel size
Maximum resolution 16.2 effective megapixels (4928 × 3280 pixels)
Lens Interchangeable, Nikon F-mount
Flash none built-in
Shutter Electronically controlled vertical-travel focal-plane shutter
Shutter speed range 30 to 1/4000 second and bulb
Exposure metering TTL exposure metering using 2,016-pixel RGB sensor
Exposure modes Programmed Auto [P], Shutter-Priority Auto [S], Aperture-Priority Auto [A], Manual [M]
Metering modes Center-weighted: Weight of 75% given to 12mm circle in center of frame; Matrix: 3D color matrix metering III (type G, E, and D lenses); color matrix metering III (other CPU lenses); Spot: Meters 4mm circle (about 1.5% of frame) centered on selected focus point
Focus areas 39-area Nikon Advanced Multi-CAM 4800
Focus modes Auto AF-S/AF-C selection (AF-A), Continuous-servo (AF-C), Manual (M) with electronic rangefinder, Single-servo AF (AF-S)
Continuous shooting 5.5 frame/s
Viewfinder Optical-type fixed eye level pentaprism
ASA/ISO range ISO equivalency 100 to 12,800 , Boost: 50–204,800
Flash bracketing 2-5 frames in steps of 1/3, 2/3, 1, 2, or 3 EV
Focus bracketing none
Custom WB Auto, Presets (5), Manual, and Color temperature in Kelvin
WB bracketing 2 to 3 exposures in increments of 1, 2 or 3 EV
Rear LCD monitor 3.2-inch diagonal, (921,000 dots), TFT LCD
Storage One Secure Digital, SDHC, SDXC compatible
Battery Li-ion EN-EL14a or EN-EL14
Weight 710 g (1.57 lb)
Made in Japan

The Nikon Df is a Full Frame F-mount DSLR FX format camera first announced by Nikon on November 5, 2013. It uses dedicated mechanical controls similar to those used on mechanical 35mm film SLR camera and has an appearance similar to the Nikon FE and Nikon FM film cameras.[1]

It has the same Sensor Overall Score 89 of DxOMark with Nikon D4, the Nikon Df set in a 1st low-light rank with 3279 ISO (Nikon D4 with 2965 ISO), but in practice the difference is small.[2]

Features

  • Same FX-format CMOS sensor and EXPEED 3 image-processing engine as the Nikon D4

References

 
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External links

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