Full review
The much-rumoured and even more longed-for update to the
The D90's main competitors are Canon's older 10-megapixel
Design
At 737 grams, the body is considerably heavier than most similar models, but it also feels sturdier and more substantial. The slightly more expensive A700 and K20D have more advanced dust and weather sealing, however. It's about the same size as the D80 and takes the same battery and vertical grip. It also has the same wireless flash controls and high-speed flash sync features. Nikon improved the shutter durability and integrated the same dust-prevention system as that of the D300. And while it uses the same LCD as that camera, it's covered by a polymer rather than glass.

Features
We really enjoyed shooting with the camera -- it's comfortable to hold and the control layout and navigation should be immediately recognisable to anyone who's shot with a Nikon dSLR recently. If you're making the switch from another brand, there might be a learning curve, though. For example, Nikon puts the white balance, ISO and quality buttons to the left of the LCD on its cameras, while other manufacturers tend to place them under the control of your right hand. As we complained about with the D80, we wish these were more easily identifiable by touch and the labelling a bit less cluttered.
To the right of the LCD you'll find the dedicated Live View button, a four-way navigation switch plus OK button, a switch to lock the navigation from moving the selected AF point, and a context-sensitive information button. In Live View mode, it cycles through a grid and two information displays and in standard shooting mode it displays the now-common settings summary and lets you change a limited number of parameters.
The parameter selections are a bit odd, though. You can only adjust settings you don't normally change that frequently -- such as Assign AE-L/AF-L button behaviour, Assign Fn button and Long exposure noise reduction -- while options you'll need more often, such as the AF mode choices or self-timer delay, remain buried in the custom settings. True, you can assign at least the AF mode choices to the Fn button, but there's a lot of other stuff you might want to assign to that as well, most notably the one-touch raw-format toggle.
While the camera's movie mode certainly ranks as the D90's most novel capability compared with its peers, the implementation leaves quite a bit to be desired. Its movie-capture specifications aren't too shabby: 24 frames per second 1,280x720-pixel motion JPEG and support for VR optical image-stabilisation if the lens has it. But it seems like Nikon faced some technical limitations that impair the capture experience, as well as makes some rookie mistakes with both its video and HDMI output.
For instance, exposure is fixed for the length of the clip, it has monaural sound, and you can only focus manually while shooting. HD clips are capped at 5 minutes because of file-system limitations. Plus, Nikon doesn't seem to have put sufficient video processing smarts into the camera to properly render video or stills.
When connected via the mini-HDMI output, it relies on the TV to do the downconversion to HD resolution for stills (never a good idea), and Nikon's true 24fps video doesn't quite match that of most TV processors' expected 23.976fps, which can result it occasional playback stutter. Still, this has been a long-awaited feature in the entry-level segment, since it's one of the two most important features users have had to sacrifice when moving up to dSLRs -- the other being pocketability.
As with the newer
There's also the usual array of improvements and additions to shooting controls, including an expansion of Active D-Lighting parameters, nine slots for custom Picture Control settings, and advanced scene modes that incorporate Picture Controls and Active D-Lighting, and which can automatically shift to slower shutter speeds when the camera knows a VR lens is attached. Most important, our testing confirmed that operating in Active D-Lighting mode doesn't impose a performance penalty, as can happen because of the processing overhead. The D90 also includes a socket for Nikon's GP-1 hot shoe GPS device, but we'd trade all these bells and whistles for the custom settings banks found in the

Our main complaint is with the new 18-105mm f3.5-5.6 kit lens. On the one hand, it seems like the perfect range to cover as a primary: at 27-157mm in 35mm-equivalent terms it gets wide enough and long enough for typical shooting needs. But on the other hand, the zoom ring is too stiff and the lens seems just slightly less sharp than the kit lenses from Canon.
Performance
But we have no complaints about the D90's performance, which clearly improves upon the D80's. It has the same 11-point AF system, but Nikon adds an 11-point AF 3D-tracking mode that's a trickle-down technology. The camera feels exceptionally responsive for its class, which is borne out by our performance testing. For all but continuous shooting, it's about as fast as the D300, and overall one of the fastest in its class. It takes less than 0.2 seconds to power up and shoot. In bright, high-contrast conditions the shot lag runs about 0.4 seconds, while in harder-to-focus scenes that runs about 0.9 seconds. It typically takes about half a second to shoot two raw or JPEG frames in a row; enabling the flash bumps that to a still-respectable 0.7 seconds.
Continuous shooting
Even without the zippier card, the burst mode and AF system are certainly fast enough to keep up with kids and dogs -- as long as you shoot JPEGs -- which make this a great camera for parents of sports-minded children. The 11-point 3D-tracking AF mode is good as long as your subject moves in predictable ways. It was less successful trying to track a squirrel, for example, which randomly moved to and fro -- the system would alternatively lock onto the tail and the head, whichever was closer.
Though it incorporates a 12-megapixel DX-format sensor, Nikon stresses that it's not the same sensor as in the D300. The pixels are the same size, however, and though it uses only 12-bit processing rather than 14-bit like the D300, Nikon claims high-ISO quality as good as the D300's, thanks to the same on-chip noise reduction. Our numbers don't exactly bear that out -- the D90 seems to perform better up to and including ISO 400, and then the numbers reverse.

As usual, it depends upon scene content, but the photos are quite usable up to and including ISO 3200. And as usual for Nikon, the D90 tends to underexpose, and the dynamic range of bright shots fares better than dark, but you can easily compensate. Overall, the tonal range is very good and colours are quite accurate, as well as nicely saturated.
D-Movie doesn't match the best of the snapshot-camera movie modes. We shot flags blowing in the breeze and a fountain that we typically use to test camcorder and camera video. The clips themselves look okay, although for some reason Nikon bumps up the saturation beyond the photo settings, and we wish the camera shot 30fps instead of 24fps. You also need three hands if you plan to use the zoom -- which requires manually focusing -- because it's hard to hold this relatively heavy dSLR out in front of you steadily while shooting videos in Live View. But problems and quality aside, we still like the creative potential of the mode.
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
| Time to first shot | Raw shot-to-shot time | Shutter lag (dim light) | Shutter lag (typical) |
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Conclusion
Ultimately, the Nikon D90 gets high marks because it's a fast camera
that delivers a great shooting experience and first-rate photos for the
money. If your budget can't stretch quite that far, the D80 remains an
excellent deal at its price.
Edited by Marian Smith

