The Nikon D7000 lives up to the high expectations from the reputed brand, and aggressively advances DSLR technology.
Mirrorless DSLRs may or may not be the future, but Nikon isn't quite finished with wowing us with what traditional DSLRs can do at reasonable price points.
The D7000 features a new 16.2 MP Nikon DX-format CMOS sensor and a new EXPEED 2 image processing engine that increases sensitivity range to ISO 100 to 6400.For action photography, it can shoot up to 100 stills at 6fps and features full 1,920 x 1,080/24p HD video with stereo sound and servo mode AF to track moving subject continuously.
Nikon first introduced servo mode AF with the Nikon D3100 entry level DSLR launched in August, 2010
A newly developed high density AF system detects and tracks subjects precisely with 39 focus points.
Other features include:
3-in., approx. 921k-dot, TFT LCD with brightness adjustment.
Pentaprism viewfinder with 100% frame coverage.
Light and rugged magnesium alloy body with high dust and moisture resistance.
Double SD card slots, SDXC compatible.
Shutter speed from 1/8,000 to 30 s in steps of 1/3 or 1/2 EV.
The Nikon D7000 is priced at $1,200 body-only, or $1,500 with an 18-105mm kit lens.
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