molde music
The features and performance of the D800 is unsurpassed in my opinion. Very very good camera. Very happy with the resolution. You can virtually crop to the smallest detail ( in RAW format ) without fear of losing detail. Beware of two major points: 1)Get a large memory card when shooting in RAW. Some images for me have exceeded 50MB plus. I have carried at least three cards of 64GB when travelling. On a recent two week trip overseas I shot through three cards without so much as blinking. Came within 20 images of running out of memory at the end of the trip. That was over 1200 plus images for me at the time. Also beware of something more troublesome, however from a maintenance standpoint. You may see this in other reviews as well. Dont know if this is unique to Nikon or not. There appears to be an "over-lubrication" of the shutter mechanism on this camera, maybe other Nikons as well, though my D7000 does not exhibit this issue. You will see the results in your images with small annoying dark grey specks or dots on your images. This is not dirt but oil droplets. The "splatter" of the excess oil shows up due to lodging onto the sensor. These will NOT "blow" off or clean off with the camera self-cleaning feature. They have to be removed with sensor cleaning. Will get worse as time goes on to a certain point of around 10,000 images shot as I read on other websites. I have already cleaned my sensor twice in just 5000 images. They are gone after cleaning but then re-appear again with additional shooting. Frustrating if you are picky about your photography, and who wouldnt be with a camera of this price-point. The cleaning of the sensor can be a daunting task if not approached carefully and with confidence. Many experts say not to do this yourself but really it is not a big deal if done properly with the correct cleaning tools. I will leave that for the experts to delve into on other websites. Anyway, just beware of this is an issue with the Nikon D800 so you will not be surprised when it happens. Really annoying to deal with, but the image specks are removable in Photoshop (clone tool) or in other software applications. Just shouldnt have to deal with this issue and Nikon should address it seriously. If under warranty, you can send back in to Nikon to clean the sensor of the oil specks but you will do this more than once if you dont learn to clean it yourself.
