Tuesday, November 06, 2007

Nikon D40 Digital SLR Camera Review

Devastating its predecessor the Nikon D50 Digital SLR camera, the all new compact and affordable point-and-shoot Nikon D40 Digital SLR camera comes at a significantly lower price. With a subtly different set of features Nikon has trimmed some of the 'less important features and have included a range of new features including the custom Auto ISO feature available on the Nikon D80 Digital SLR cameras. Nikon appears to have concentrated on what makes a good camera. A solid viewfinder,a short shutter lag, and an exceptionally short viewfinder blackout. On the negative side the Nikon D40 Digital SLR camera does not have an internal focus drive motor and as a result no mechanical focus drive pin. Rather it has CPU contacts allowing Auto Focus only with AF-S and AF-I lenses which have built-in focus motors. This means the Nikon 'standard' lenses the Nikkor 50 mm F1.8D and the F1.4D will be manual focus only on the Nikon D40 Digital SLR camera. The difference in the lens mount of the Nikon D40 Digital SLR camera and the Nikon D80 Digital SLR camera is the mechanical focus drive pin at about the 7 o'clock position on the mount of the Nikon D80 Digital SLR camera. I personally purchased the Nikon D40 Digital SLR camera and my family and I have been taking pictures non stop since purchasing it in January 2007. I highly recommend the Nikon D40 Digital SLR camera for an entry level professional grade camera. I also would suggest purchasing a large memory chip I purchased a 4GB chip for under 100 dollars at Futureshop and it held over 1600 photos at the highest resolution the camera offers. Hats off to Nikon, for delivering a solid, affordable digital camera with multitude of features and resisting the temptation to enter the chase for more mega pixels. Robb JensenFeedBack info@makemoneybasics.comhttp://www.makemoneybasics.com Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Robb_Jensen

Wednesday, March 07, 2007

Olympus Digital Cameras

Olympus Digital cameras offer a great variety of different zoom, lenses and mega pixels. Whether amateur or professional you will appreciate the Olympus camera. I have a FE-100 with 4.0 mega pixels and zoom of 8.2-17.4mm1-3.0.5.0 and have taken many pictures with it. It has a memory card I bought for it and it takes more pictures than I have ever used at one trip. We went Elk hunting this year and I took 107 pictures of our camp, the mountains, a bull moose with a cow and a calf, many deer and some big horn sheep. I took scenery picture while were on the move and they looked good. My Grandchildren borrowed the camera and took it snow boarding and took some great aerial pictures of them doing jumps and tricks on there snow boards. I was real surprised that they came out so good. Full and Color and you felt like you were right in the action if you closed your eyes and thought about it.

I came home downloaded them onto my Computer and e-mailed them to all my family and friends. They thought they were the best pictures I’ve ever taken. So this camera offers more than an amateur could use but can use. It's a great camera for anyone who wants a good digital camera, whether for allot of features or just a few, Olympus offers a good variety. If you get a Olympus camera, I would recommend buying the memory card for it also, as it give you allot of pictures you wouldn't get to take without it.

Depending on what size and features you are looking for. There are many styles and sizes to choose from. The Olympus Sp700-6.0 mega pixels Digital Camera with 3x zoom & 3.0 LCD Screen, the Olympus American Stylus 500+P-10 Digital Photo Printer, the 4.0 MP Digital Camera with 1.8” Color LCD Screen and 3x optical zoom,12x total zoom capability, and the Olympus 225600 Camera Ir-300 5.0Mp 3x Optical Zoom Digital Camera Olympus c-7000 Zoom Digital Camera.

Monday, October 02, 2006

Sigma DP1

The other new digital camera from Sigma is a unique compact model that uses the same large sensor as the SD14. Here are the specs on the DP1:
DP1
  • Same 14 total effective Megapixel Foveon X3 sensor as the SD14; not sure if it supports the interpolated 14MP mode as well F4, 16.6 mm lens, equivalent to 28 mm
  • Uses new Sigma "True" image processor
  • 2.5" LCD display
  • Full manual controls
  • RAW and JPEG support
  • Price and availability (among other things) unclear at this point
Click the post title for more information.