Nikon D700 review

Our rating

4.0 stars out of 5

User rating

5 stars out of 5

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Verdict

As long as you don't need seriously high-resolution photos, video capture, or machine-gun-fast sports shooting, the Nikon D700 has everything you need in a pro full-frame camera for a reasonable price

Typical price

£2,199

Good

  • Excellent photo quality as high as ISO 6,400
  • Fast focus and shooting, even in low light
  • First-rate build quality and control layout

Bad

  • Relatively heavy
  • Low resolution for its class
  • Viewfinder only provides 95 per cent coverage and lacks interchangeable focusing screens
  • Occasional issues with automatic white balance under artificial light

In this review

For those who don't need the indestructibility or built-in vertical grip of a traditional pro dSLR such as the Nikon D3 or the Canon EOS-1D Mark III -- and that's quite a chunk of the pro market -- smaller, lighter and cheaper full-frame models such as the Nikon D700, the Canon EOS 5D and the 5D Mark II are the real workhorses. Plus, their (relatively) lower prices put full-frame shooting in the hands of deep-pocketed amateur photographers.

The D700 comes in two configurations: body only or in a kit with a lens, such as the veteran AF-S VR 24-120mm f3.5-5.6G IF-ED lens featured here. With the kit version you end up paying about £250 for a lens (£1,850 total) that sells independently for about £400. When you're paying more than £1,500 for a camera body, opting for the somewhat middling lens seems rather foolish. On the other hand, it's relatively compact, and replacing it with something superior would require multiple, larger and more expensive lenses.

Though one normally doesn't consider a body weight of 1kg an asset, it comes up a lightweight compared with 1.4kg-plus models such as the D3 or Canon EOS-1D line. However, it's still a tad heavier than full-frame competitors such as the Sony Alpha DSLR-A900 (950g) and the Canon EOS 5D series (about 800g). The magnesium-alloy body feels like a Hummer and it's better sealed than the Nikon D300, but it's not up to the dust and weatherproofing standards of the D3.

Design
The body design clearly has more in common with the D300 than the D3, and is pretty Nikon-conventional. Almost all settings are adjusted via combinations of buttons and the front or rear dials. On the top left you've got the quality, white balance and ISO buttons, plus a locked wheel that selects among drive modes (single shot, continuous low, and continuous high), Live View, self timer and mirror lock-up. This does make Live View operation a bit clunkier than it needs to be.

Newer models have a dedicated button for popping into the mode, which makes it faster and a bit easier to use. On the top right, the power switch surrounds the shutter release, plus there are buttons for exposure compensation and exposure mode selection (PASM). Nikon provides a traditional status LCD, which displays slightly different information than the viewfinder: it doesn't show metering mode or ISO speed.

On the front left side of the body sits a switch for focus mode (single, continuous and manual), flash pop-up and compensation buttons, and ports for a wired remote and flash sync cable. There's a programmable function button between the grip and the lens that you press with your right-hand ring finger -- you can assign it from a variety of options, but our favourite is probably the virtual horizon, which uses the exposure compensation readout to display off-horizontal tilt. You can also reassign the depth-of-field preview button, which sits higher between the grip and the lens.

One of our favourite aspects of the D700's design -- common to all Nikon's midrange and above dSLRs -- is the use of switches for directly selecting metering mode (1.5 per cent spot, centreweighted, evaluative) and AF area mode (single point, dynamic area and auto area). You then use the eight-way multiselector to pick your focus point in the viewfinder. It's the same navigation control as on the D3, and while it's quite convenient, we find the switch itself -- which you also use to scroll through photos and information displays during playback -- just a little too jumpy when we're moving fast. Still, it beats the alternatives.

Other controls on the back include separate AF activation and AF/AE lock buttons, as well as the usual assortment of playback, delete, info, menu and so on. As is typical of Nikons dSLRs, the D700 has a two-button format (delete plus mode) and reset (quality plus exposure compensation).

Features
Like the D3 and D300, the D700 provides lots of customisation capabilities, including two banks of savable settings with four slots each and a user-definable menu page. As with the D300, your dynamic area options are 9-, 21-, or 51-point AF areas plus 51-point 3D tracking. Also like the D300, they're unfortunately buried in the menus. We also like the ability to choose the size of the centre for centre-weighted average metering. (There are too many options to cover here, so download the PDF manual for the details.)

The 5D Mark II, with its movie-capture mode and high-resolution 21-megapixel sensor, overshadows the D700's relatively low-resolution 12-megapixel CMOS -- the same as the D3's. But its bread-and-butter feature set is more than enough for any pro. Like its Nikon siblings, it's especially suited for HDR work, with bracketing options of up to nine shots at ±5EV in third-, half-, or full-stop increments.

Other notables include the now-common Picture Controls for adjusting and saving contrast, brightness, sharpness, saturation and hue, Active D-Lighting; Vignette control, a rather annoying multiple exposure option that resets to Off after every batch and requires a trip into the menu system to turn back on, and raw file options of 12- or 14-bit with lossy compressed, lossless compressed and uncompressed variations. Like the D3, the D700 has a DX crop mode to match DX lenses. 

User reviews1

Add your review

JamieCampbell's avatar
5 stars out of 5

JamieCampbell 18 March 2011

Good: Incredible ISO, Full frame, Big LCD screen with cover, Works with any lens, Well structured menu, Long-lasting battery

Bad: Heavy, Minimal software, Need to use Nikon Software to do download pics (unless you use a CF reader)

Comment: I've been shooting for over 30 years, shooting Nikon, Canon, Leica and Olympus. I'm a believer that the photographer is far more important than the camera, and I can pretty much get great results from any camera. But this camera simply stands out from the pack. It is nearly perfect. And I say that as someone who usually gets professional cameras.

After living with this camera for 9 months, I have lost all desire for any other camera. I'm a gear-head and love to get my hands on new equipment. I love getting new cameras and always figure out what I would improve on it. But this camera just does everything and I (this amazes me) just don't care what else they come out with. The feel, the controls, the image quality and overall performance is simply amazing. It is nearly perfect - so what are the "flaws"?

Well, I wish I could lock the shooting banks. The camera lets you set it up and store your settings in a "bank". This lets you rapidly change to a particlar bank to load your settings. You might have one bank set for sports, another for night time shooting, another for multi-flash lighting, etc. The flaw? Any change you make changes the bank. So your bank changes as you change the camera. That nearly wrecks shooting banks for me. The workaround is to set your banks, then save them to a CF card (I use that old 1GB card I had laying around). Before a shoot, I pop the card in and reload all the settings. I just with I could lock the banks and not have to carry that card around.

And you can't combine the mirror-up mode with the self timer. You either have to use a remote release (another thing to carry) or let it time out (it fires after 30 seconds with the mirror up).

That's pretty much it. Well, it is not cheap, but considering you get the same performance as the Nikon D3 for half the price, this is an amazing deal.

If you want a suggestion, consider this camera with the Nikkor 85mm f/1.4 AF-D. This combination makes some jaw-dropping images and every girl loves it.

*** P.S. If you will buy this camera I suggest at: amazon.co.uk/dp/B001BYMC5K/?tag=reviews.cnet.co.uk-21

I own it

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