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The Nikon D7000 follows conventional DSLR design in having a shooting mode dial on the top of the camera, which allows you to select either one of the advanced modes like Manual, Aperture- or Shutter-priority, or 19 different scene modes. It also obviously greatly expands the overall memory capacity, useful if you shoot a lot of images in a short space of time. This allows you to use two cards in tandem, with the ability to overflow images onto the second card, backup images from the first to the second, or save RAW to slot 1 and JPEG to slot 2. The D7000 records images on SD/SDHC/SDHC cards via not one but two slots housed in the large right-hand compartment.
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The D7000 uses a new EN-EL15 battery, MH-25 recharger and MB-D11 battery grip, which improves the handling but doesn't speed up the camera in any way. This all means that upgrading from the D90 to the D7000 is a near seamless experience from a handling point of view. In addition the Playback button has moved to the left of the viewfinder in line with models higher up the range.
NIKON D7000 CAMERA MANUAL MOVIE
Only the combined Live View switch and Movie Mode button and lockable drive mode dial are completely new, with the former being an improvement on the D90 but the latter being somewhat awkward, requiring the use of both fore- and middle fingers.
NIKON D7000 CAMERA MANUAL ISO
The overall control layout and 'philosophy' of the Nikon D7000 is very similar to the D90, with two control wheels and dedicated buttons for controlling ISO sensitivity, white balance, metering and AF mode. This, however, introduces some shutter lag, which usually isn't worth the few decibels of difference versus what is already an impressively quiet shutter (Nikon actually recommends using the Quiet mode for taking pictures of sleeping babies, a situation in which a bit of shutter delay obviously isn't a problem). Furthermore, there is also a Quiet mode, in which the mirror is raised fairly slowly to further reduce the sound it makes. The shutter release action on the Nikon D7000 is surprisingly quiet, with an exemplarily dampened mirror slap that makes this DSLR actually quieter than some rangefinder cameras, and it's tested for 150,000 cycles. Nikon bodies don't offer any form of in-camera image stabilisation, unlike similar models from Sony, Pentax and Olympus, so the relatively affordable and versatile 18-105mm VR lens is a good starting point if you don't already have any Nikon lenses. It also adds the very important advantage of Vibration Reduction. The 18-105mm f/3.5-5.6G ED VR kit lens that ships with the D7000 feels well-balanced on the Nikon D7000 and despite only having a plastic mount it fits into place with a reassuring mechanical click. There's also a rubberised thumb rest on the back of the body. The right-hand grip bears more resemblance to that of the D300s, with a chunkier rubberised coating than on the D90. It isn't as compact and lightweight as the D90 but neither is it quite as bulky and heavy as the D300s. The new Nikon D7000 slots in between the existing D90 and D300s models, not only in terms of feature set and functionality, but also in terms of size and weight.
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NIKON D7000 CAMERA MANUAL 1080P
Key highlights of the D7000 include Full 1080p HD video with full-time autofocus and manual exposure control, an ISO range of 100-25600, the widest of any Nikon DX camera, a new 2,016-pixel 3D Colour Matrix metering system, new EXPEED 2 image-processing engine, new 39-point Auto-focus system with 3D tracking, 14-bit analogue-to-digital conversion, 6fps continuous shooting, dust- and moisture-sealed magnesium alloy body, 921k dot 3-inch LCD screen, and dual memory card slots. The Nikon D7000 is a new prosumer DSLR camera with a 16.2-megapixel DX-format image sensor.