Nikon D70S
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Nikon D70s Digital SLR Camera with Nikon AF-S DX 18-70mm lensCompactFlash, Microdrive, F/3.5-4.5
The D70s is an evolution of the award winning D70. It inherits the image quality, high performance and user-friendliness of the D70 and introduces refinements that further help photographers freely capture precious moments the instant they unfold. The D70s Kit includes the AF-S DX Zoom-Nikkor 18-70mm f/3.5-4.5G IF-ED lens optically designed for use with Nikon digital SLR sensors. [ Report abuse or wrong photo | Share your Nikon D70S photo ]
Manual
Preview of first few manual pages (at low quality). Check before download. Click to enlarge.
Download
(English)Nikon D70S Digital Camera, size: 25.3 MB |
Related manuals Nikon D70S Brochure Nikon D70S Quick Start Guide |
Nikon D70S
Video review
Jumpstart DVD Guide to the Nikon D70s brief extract.
User reviews and opinions
| Sparcy |
3:06pm on Monday, October 25th, 2010 ![]() |
| Great value for money, A well balanced camera I can not fault it. Vivid shots! easy to navigate and camera of the year 2004! a little bit heavy. | |
| CumBabe |
3:14pm on Thursday, September 30th, 2010 ![]() |
| This remote is great for tripping the shutter once you know that your camera has stopped shaking after zooming in to your subject with that long lens. | |
| ramses |
5:54am on Friday, August 27th, 2010 ![]() |
| I have used this camera since Sept 2005. This my first SLR Digital and absolutely love it. The pictures I have been taking have a professional look. | |
| GeraldL |
1:40am on Wednesday, July 14th, 2010 ![]() |
| Smoothest action of any lens that I have ever owned. Quick focusing and great bokeh. A little heavy to carry and long for some storage gear. Love it; it is now my workhorse lens. If it was lighter, it could be used as a walkabout daily lens too. Best standard zoom you can buy for a Nikon. AF is very snappy, build is amazing, contrasty lens, and images are very sharp wide open. | |
| trulllll |
8:44pm on Tuesday, July 13th, 2010 ![]() |
| High performance and easy to use, the Nikon D70s offers a higher level will increase the positive experience of using a digital reflex camera. Button color outside and predecessors nikon D70 no different, including the size and color. For a picture. 2)Sensor (CCD in Nikon vs CMOS in Canon). I shoot mostly wildlife/still life and landscape. So i went in for CCD (Nikon). | |
| ChristopherM |
12:25am on Thursday, June 10th, 2010 ![]() |
| Airframe type SLR Digital SLR cameras APS-C standard digital SLR camera Manually operated manually full support CCD sensor Sensor size 23.7 Ã- 15. | |
| olliewigg |
4:40am on Thursday, May 27th, 2010 ![]() |
| Plaqued with problems. Even with light use, t... Hey, it takes great pictures When it works Why does this camera have to be such a put down. I have recently purchased a nikon d40, and that seemed to satisfy my needs for a good camera. Still like it. Nothing has presented itself ... great pictures, flexible settings, optional lenses small rearview LCD | |
| xander |
8:21am on Monday, May 10th, 2010 ![]() |
| Bought a second hand D70s about a year ago to prop up my Nikon collection of equipment (being my first Nikon DSLR), so I got it cheap. I bought my D70s in August of 2007 and all I have to say is WOW! Nice camera! The pictures are beautiful and crisp and the image quality is wonderful. | |
| jstuck |
12:04pm on Thursday, April 29th, 2010 ![]() |
| The D70s is my second Nikon. 20 yrs. ago I got my first. The camera is one tough customer. I camp, ski, bike, hike. I have no regrets buying this camera, I hardly ever use my film cameras anymore. Awesome entry level Digital SLR, bought it for a trip overseas and it performed very well. | |
| fbuhl |
3:10pm on Friday, April 23rd, 2010 ![]() |
| Why does this camera have to be such a put do... Not many not many at all Not the best of quality, bulky and not much better than the original | |
| pschroth |
4:35am on Tuesday, April 13th, 2010 ![]() |
| I purchased the Nikon D70 about two and a half years ago, when I temporarily moved from the United States to Rome, Italy. I am a Canadian Nikon user. I had this camera over a year, without any problem. And one day. | |
Comments posted on www.ps2netdrivers.net are solely the views and opinions of the people posting them and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of us.
Documents

Nikon D70/D70s User's Guide
2006 KenRockwell.com
Nikon D70/D70s Users Guide INTRODUCTION This is how I use and set up my D70. I have a D70; the D70s is exactly the same. I start off explaining things so my mom can understand, and get on to deciphering every menu item for advanced users at the bottom.
Ken Rockwell
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Nikon D70/D70s Users Guide BASICS: CAMERA Many of these adjustments require you to be in be in the P, S, A or M exposure modes. You set that on the top dial. The cute preset modes often lock out some adjustments. I leave most settings at their defaults and use the Program exposure mode. I never use the cute little preset icon modes because I prefer to set anything special myself. ISO: I use 200. If the light gets dim and my images would get blurry from slower shutter speeds I increase the ISO to 400, 800 or 1,600. I never bother with in-between settings like 250 or 640. The D70 looks fine at ISO 1,600 if you need it. I'd much rather have a slightly grainy but sharp image than a less grainy but blurry one. Unlike film, the D70 looks great at high ISOs, so I use them anytime I need them. I would love to use ISO AUTO, but usually don't because it also remains active in Manual exposure mode. This firmware defect defeats the purpose of the manual exposure mode. Using menus to deactivate AUTO ISO for manual exposure mode takes more time than AUTO ISO saves. Rats. White Balance: I use AUTO -3 and use an 81A glass warming filter on the lens. I prefer warmer (oranger) images. See more details about how to set these on my D70 Back Panel Controls page and details on why you care at my general White Balance page. QUAL: I shoot JPG NORMAL. This is called NORM and L on the top LCD, which stands for NORMal JPG compression and Large (3,008 x 2,000) image size. I've made 12 x 18" prints of the same shot made in BASIC, NORMAL, FINE and raw. I saw NO difference! Seriously, if you saw these prints you wouldn't be able to sort them out either. I can see only the slightest differences on my monitor enlarged to 100%, which is similar to a 20 x 30" print, and my digital LCD monitor has 100% MTF pixel-to-pixel, which prints don't. Don't worry: if you need space, shoot BASIC and no one will see the difference. The only way to tell is by looking at the file size. I'll use BASIC for parties and sports when I'm shooting many hundreds and hundreds of images at once. In these cases I'm more concerned with time wasted for the files to transfer, copy and archive. Basic looks 99% the same as FINE, even blown up big. I'll use FINE on rare occasions where I'm shooting just a few images and expect to peer at them very closely. In these cases the extra size isn't significant if I expect to be spending a lot of time analyzing each image. I don't use raw, as you can read on my Raw vs. JPG page. I avoid FINE JPG because NORM gives me the same results, with half the file size. If I shot FINE I might run out of room on a card and miss a shot. Missing a shot is a very visible defect, and I see no defects in NORM. Nikon knows what they're doing. That's why they call it Normal and that's why I normally use Normal JPG. OPTIMIZE IMAGE: I prefer the vivid color I get from Fuji's Velvia 50 film, so I tweak my D70 to give color as vivid as I can get. To do this go to MENU > Shooting Menu (camera icon) > Optimize Image > Custom > (set Saturation to + and Color Mode to IIIa) > - - Done > OK. If you forget to select "- Done" and hit OK it won't remember these settings! Details are on the Shooting Menu page.
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Nikon D70/D70s Users Guide For photos of people I either set the colors back to normal, or cheat and use the Portrait preset mode on the top dial. FOCUS: AF. METERING: Matrix. LENS Many lenses have no switches or settings. If so, don't worry. More advanced lenses have focus mode settings, which will be either "M/A - A," or "A - M" on older lenses. On older lenses I leave it at "A," which is Autofocus. "M" is manual focus. Sometimes you also have to move the switch on the camera, which is a pain. If the switch says "M/A - A" then I use M/A. This gives autofocus, and if I grab the focus ring it instantly lets me make manual corrections. As soon as I tap the shutter button again I get autofocus. This M/A setting, if the lens has it, provides both kinds of focus without ever having to move any switches. It's the best. Non-G lenses will have an aperture ring where the lens is attached to the camera. Set this this ring to the largest number, usually 22, if not 32 or 16. This number will be in orange on autofocus lenses. There usually is a lock to keep this ring set there, since if it comes off that setting you'll get an error message from the D70s/D70/D50. MORE These are the basics. Keep reading for far more explicit details at the end.
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Nikon D70/D70s Users Guide CONTROLS (I explain every button and knob) CONTROLS: FRONT of CAMERA Focus Mode (the little lever at the bottom of the lens marked AF and M [hidden above]): I set it to AF. This means Auto Focus. M means manual focus. In manual focus you have to twist the focus ring yourself and look for a sharp image in the viewfinder. In manual you also can look for the green dot at the bottom left in the viewfinder. The green dot lights up when you're in focus. Depth-of-Field Preview (the little button below the lens in the photo above): Tap this to stop the diaphragm down to the taking aperture. The viewfinder probably gets darker, but look carefully and you can see what's in focus or not. This analog feature is a remnant from film days. Today most people look at the LCD playback. Flash Bolt Button (left side of flash hump, as seen from the rear): This does several things depending on how and when you press it. 1.) If the flash is down, press the flash button and the flash pops up. 2a.) If the flash is up, press and hold the flash button and turn the front dial to change the flash exposure compensation. This sets the brightness of the flash. + makes the flash brighter, - makes it dimmer. This setting only changes the brightness of the flash. It leaves the background ambient exposure alone. Set it to - if your subjects are getting washed out. If you run out of flash power beyond 10 to 20 feet then setting it to + can't make the flash any brighter. If you set flash exposure compensation to anything other than zero you'll see a little "+/- bolt" icon in the finder and on the top LCD. 2b.) If the flash is up, press and hold the flash button and turn the rear dial to change the flash sync mode. You'll see it on the top LCD in the box with the bolt. FLASH SYNC MODES Select these by holding down the flash button on the left side of the flash hump and spinning the rear dial. Your selection is shown on the top LCD in the box with the bolt. Normal (blank, which is the default): In Program and A exposure modes, the shutter won't stay open longer than about 1/60 second. You can change this minimum speed in custom function 21, which defaults at about 1/60 second. I forget the exact default because I have mine set to 1/15. In this mode you won't get blur indoors, but you may not get more than a very black background either. Choose a longer speed, like 1/8, in CSM 21 to lighten the backgrounds indoors, but watch for motion. I usually use Normal mode, since if I don't I can get some scary long exposures if I'm not expecting them in the dark. Red-Eye (eyeball icon): I never use this. It shines an obnoxious light in your subject's eyes for a couple of seconds and then releases the shutter. If I set this mode by accident it bugs the heck out of me, because the camera doesn't go off until several seconds after I've pressed the shutter, but I've set no self timer! It doesn't do much to reduce redeye anyway. Skip this mode. SLOW (called SLOW on the top LCD): This mode is very useful. It lets the shutter stay open as long as it needs to so dim ambient light can expose properly with flash. Of course if it's dark these exposure times can get long. You can get blur from subject motion and camera shake. In daylight
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Nikon D70/D70s Users Guide SLOW is the same as NORMAL, since exposure times are short. SLOW unlocks the camera in P and A exposure modes to make exposures as long as it wants to in dim light. Have a look at most issues of National Geographic and you'll see many indoor shots made in this mode. The background exposes correctly, people may be blurred, and a burst of flash freezes them along with the blurry ghost images. Normal and SLOW do the same thing in S and M exposure modes, since you or the camera may select any shutter speed in these modes regardless of flash sync. Red-Eye SLOW (eye and SLOW icon): This is the SLOW mode and redeye. I don't use it for the same reason I don't use Redeye. REAR (called REAR on the top LCD): Normally the flash goes off the instant the shutter opens. With long exposures and blurred ghost images you ordinarily get the ghost streaming out in front of the subject. Think about it: if a car is driving, the flash goers off and freezes it, then the car moves forward. You'll have a ghost image ahead of the car, which usually looks stupid. Select REAR mode to have the flash go off as the shutter closes. Now you'll have motion blurring behind the frozen flash image. Another reason to select REAR is because the flash goes off at the end of the exposure. People presume photos are made the instant a flash fires, then leave. This wreaks havoc with long exposures. If you use REAR mode with long exposures they'll stay put and not move until the end. Of course you'll also want to select flash lock to eliminate the preflash. Read about flash lock later on my Custom Menus pages. REAR doesn't do anything with short exposures. REAR also engages SLOW, but SLOW doesn't light up on the LCD. This lack of the SLOW indication is a flaw in the firmware. No big deal. In REAR the D70's exposure setting in Program mode chooses slower shutter speeds and small apertures if you're in daylight. Trick FV Lock Mode: You set this in the Custom Menus. Check it out; it prevents people from blinking with flash!. CONTROLS AND SETTINGS: TOP PANEL From left to right: Exposure Mode Dial (Left side): I use "P" for program auto exposure. In this mode the camera chooses the f/stop and shutter speed for you. If I want to use different apertures or shutter speeds I rotate the rear command dial, which selects alternate combinations of f/stops and shutter speeds which give the same exposure. Nikon calls this "Program Shift." A "*" is added next to the P on the top LCD to let you know you've chosen a different combination for exposure. If you want to use only one aperture or one shutter speed then use S or A mode. If you want to set it the hard way, use M, manual, mode. Metering Mode: Its little icon shows four corners and a central dot. It looks a little like a [ * ]. I use the default of Matrix, which is shown by the four corners. Spin the control knob while holding this button and you can select center weighted (a circle) and spot (a dot). I never use these other modes. * Green Dot (combined with metering button). This resets many of the camera's controls to their defaults when held in along with the other green dot button on the top left of the back of the camera. This is handy at the beginning of each day, since it will reset everything from whatever whacky ISO, white balance, file format and other settings you were using the night before.
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Nikon D70/D70s Users Guide Power Switch (right side around shutter release): ON, unless the camera is put away in a case. The D70s only wakes up when you tap the shutter, so it's off even when the switch is set to ON. There is no battery drain unless the shutter is tapped and the camera wakes up.The only thing the OFF position does is act as a lock against unintended operation. +/- Exposure Compensation. This makes the picture lighter or darker. Hold it and spin the rear dial to change the brightness of your pictures. Remember to set it back to zero when you're done. If you don't you'll see a "+/-" in the viewfinder and the top LCD. You can read the value of this setting on the top LCD and through the viewfinder, which is great!. See more at How to Set Exposure. Ignore Nikon when they suggest you don't use this with Matrix Metering; I do it all the time. Backlight (button on right with a sun on it): press this to light the top LCD at night. Format (combined with backlight button): Hold this along with its brother on the back left rear of the camera (combined with the rectangle button). You'll get a blinking "For" on the top LCD. Hold both of these again and you'll completely reformat your memory card. Professionals reformat a card each and every time we put a card in the camera. This is because files and structures are sometimes picked up or changed when read with a card reader or used in any other camera. Professionals prefer to be safe than sorry. We don't use cards to archive previous photos. One time I kept saving my winner shots on a card by simply erasing the rest each time. After a few months I started to get errors. These went away as soon as I reformatted the card. Reformatting completely renovates the card. Erasing does not, and may leave the potential for errors. CONTROLS and SETTINGS: BACK of CAMERA From left to right: BKT: I don't use bracketing. This control sets bracketing. Hold it and spin the two control rings on the right of the camera while looking at the top LCD. Rectangles (also doubles as one of the two FORMAT buttons): This controls the frame advance mode. You hold this and spin the rear control dial. When you see [S] on the top LCD you have the normal mode I use, which gives one shot each time you press the shutter. Hold and spin to show rectangles on the top LCD and you're in Continuous mode. In Continuous mode the camera keeps taking pictures for as long as you hold down the shutter button. Pro cameras label the rectangles as C, for Continuous. Spin it some more and you'll see a clock. This is the self timer, in which mode the camera goes off a few seconds after you press the shutter. The mode that shows a narrow black rectangle sets the D70s to respond to the EN-L3 remote control. AE-L AF-L (Top center): Hold this to lock settings while shooting. You can alter what this button does in the custom menus. I get into more details under custom settings for this button. Play [>] Button: Press it to see your pictures. ISO/Checkerboard, WB/?, and QUAL/ENTER/Magnifying Glass Buttons: these do different things depending on whether the camera is taking a picture or showing one. If the camera is idle, or you tap the shutter, the camera is in the taking mode and the buttons do what the silver letters say: ISO, WB and QUAL. If the camera is displaying an image the buttons do what they say in yellow: checkerboard, ? and ENTER. I'll explain each of these as if they are seven different buttons below. Often the camera is in playback mode from the last shot. I need to tap the shutter to put the camera back into taking mode for the ISO, WB and QUAL functions to work. I make it a habit to tap the shutter button first before using those buttons just in case.
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Nikon D70/D70s Users Guide ISO: I use 200 as explained of the first page. If you just took a picture be sure to tap the shutter button to return the camera to the taking mode. If you don't and are viewing a photo you just made the button will swap among the various multi-image playback modes! WB (White Balance): I use AUTO -3 (A -3) and use an 81A glass warming filter as explained on the first page. See my White Balance page for more details about what this adjustment does and why you care. To choose different settings, press and hold the WB button and turn the rear knob. Look at the top LCD and you'll see the little sun and cloud etc. icons cycle as you turn the knob. To set the D70 to give accurate color under any arbitrary weird combination of lighting you can use a manual white balance mode called PRE(set). It's shown as the PRE icon on the far right of the top LCD, just past the Shade icon. Spin the knob while holding WB until you get to PRE. Release the button. Press and hold the WB button again for several seconds until it makes PRE blink. Point the camera at something white or gray that's in the same light as the subject and press the shutter. If "Gd" flashes you're good. If "nG" (no good) flashes, try again. You can cheat (I do) and point the camera at a broad light source, like a fluorescent fixture, and get great results without having to carry or find a gray or white card. The PREset mode is used to tell the camera what's supposed to be neutral. Once you've set this the camera corrects all the colors to keep neutral grays and whites as neutral grays and whites. This usually gives great colors for everything else in the same light. QUAL: I use NORM - L, or NORMal compression, Large (3,008 x 2,000) JPEG, as explained of the first page. Checkerboard: this lets you see one, four or nine images on the screen during playback. Press the button to switch among these modes. ? / Key: In playback it protects (locks) the image from erasure. Warning 1.): it marks the file so well that it won't empty out of my trash on my computer unless I go in and remark the file on my computer first. Warning 2.): these images are erased from your memory card when you format anyway. I don't use this lock feature. When setting menus the "?" will give more information about your settings. Magnifying Glass: Press to zoom in on image. When you do this you can zoom in more by pressing the checkerboard button and spinning the rear dial. You can use the thumb switch to scroll around the image. ENTER: Used while playing with the menus. Lock Switch: This is the L - dot (lock - unlock) switch below the four-way thumb switch. The dot (unlocked) position lets you move the AF area with the rocker button. The L (locked) position prevents moving the selected AF area. It doesn't lock your ability to navigate the menus, which is a huge advantage over the older professional D1X! I usually leave it in dot to allow me to select different AF areas. Trash Can: Press once, then press again to confirm and delete an image during playback.
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Nikon D70/D70s Users Guide MENUS: PLAYBACK MENU ("[ > ]" icon) Press MENU and then select the "[ > ] " (play) icon to get into the play menu. Delete: This is helpful if you want to delete all images while saving those for which you pressed the "? / Key" button to lock. I don't use this. I do all my editing and selection in my computer and I do my in-camera deletions one-by-one with the trash can key, so I don't use this. Playback Folder: The camera can record and play back from different folders. I leave this set to ALL. CURRENT ignores photos in different folders. You'd only have different folders on your card if you shot them in a different camera without reformatting ( a bad idea) or played with your camera deliberately to create new folders. This is difficult with the D70 and I cover it later. Rotate Tall: I set this to NO. If you set this to ON and if you have vertical images and set autorotate to ON, vertical shots will rotate themselves on playback. I prefer to rotate the camera physically on playback. When the camera does this electronically the resulting image is very tiny, since the screen is much less tall than it is wide. Slide Show: Lets you amaze your friends with an exciting slide show on the tiny screen. I don't bother with this. Hide Image: This lets you mark images not to play back on the camera, even though they remain on the card. Use this if you get an embarrassing shot of a friend and want to make them believe you deleted it! Move the cursor left and right to select images, tap it up or down to mark as Hide or Unhide, and press enter to save. Now the camera won't play these images, even though it still tallies them in it's counter on the top right that reads "34/284." You can detect a hidden image because this counter will skip. Print Set: I ignore this. You can mark which images to print, how many of each and if you want data and dates imprinted. I do all this in my computer. MENUS: SHOOTING MENU (camera icon) Press MENU and then select the camera (shooting) icon to get to the shooting menu. OPTIMIZE IMAGE: This is where you can program the look of an image. You can mimic the effects for which we used to have to select different kinds of film. There are choices of several canned presets, as well as CUSTOM, which lets you set your own. Remember to select DONE or OK when playing with the Optimize Image settings, otherwise it won't remember! You can swap between your custom setting below and a canned preset, like PORTRAIT, by spinning the top left mode knob. Custom settings apply in the P, S, A and M modes, but not in the SPORTS, PORTRAIT, etc. modes. The dummy modes like PORTRAIT override most of your manual settings, and the camera reverts to your special settings when you return from one of the dummy modes. There's nothing wrong with the dummy modes; use them if they save you time. I use the PORTRAIT mode for people since I usually have my camera's colors cranked up. The mode knob makes it easy to swap. Canned Settings: I don't use Nikon's canned Optimize Image presets of Normal, Vivid, Sharper, Softer, Direct Print, Portrait or Landscape. Feel free to play with them yourself. This is a beauty of the D70: you can use whatever works for you.
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Nikon D70/D70s Users Guide I prefer my custom settings below because I prefer to leave the chroma cranked all the way up and let the camera automatically control contrast and sharpening as conditions change. Your style of photography will differ. You can look at the images made with each of the canned settings directly to see how you like them. You also can use Nikon's free Nikon View software or look at the data on the D70 itself to read what values of contrast, sharpening, color, etc, were used for each preset. The reason I skip the VIVID preset is because it selects Mode IIIa, but leave the saturation at normal. I explain these below. For photos of people I either set the colors back to normal, or cheat and use the Portrait preset mode on the top dial. As mentioned on the top page, using the preset scene modes on the top dial often override any settings you've made. I only use P, S, A and M modes which unlock all the adjustments. Of course using the top dial's Portrait mode sets the colors optimally for portraits, and sets it all back when I spin that dial back to P, S, A or M. This trick saves me a lot of clicking around under Optimize Image, but also eliminates my ability to alter the White Balance while in the top dial's portrait scene mode. Optimize Image Custom Settings As mentioned on the first page, I prefer the vivid color I get from Fuji's Velvia 50 film, so I tweak my D70 to give color as vivid as I can get. To do this I go to MENU > Shooting Menu (camera icon) > Optimize Image > Custom > (set Saturation to + and Color Mode to IIIa) > - - Done > OK. If you forget to select "- - Done" and hit OK it won't remember these settings! Here are what each setting inside the Custom option of Optimize Image does. Sharpening: I leave mine on AUTO. I've never messed with the manual settings. Sharpening is an artificial effect not to be confused with sharpness. When I first got a digital camera I thought: "cool, I'm cranking this to 11," and realized my error. Don't turn it up for no reason, since the image can start to look artificial. Play with it if you want. I've played with it out of curiosity, and always leave it on AUTO. Tone Compensation: This is Nikon's code word for Contrast. I always leave mine set to AUTO. In AUTO the D70 automatically applies the Zone System and adjusts contrast to match your subject, for each and every shot! The D70 automatically lowers contrast and increases dynamic range for very contrasty subjects, and cranks it up for dull subjects. I've played with the manual settings out of curiosity. Saturation varies a little with contrast, too. If you crank it to +2 it looks vivid and bold for flatter subjects, but when you have a contrasty subject it's too much and blows out. Leave it in AUTO and you won't have to piddle with it. AUTO works great. The CUSTOM Tone Compensation setting (scroll down) is for hackers. If you pay Nikon $100 for Nikon Capture software you can create your own crazy H&D curves and then go out of your way to load them into your D70. Once you create and load them you no longer need the software. Custom curves are way beyond anything with which I want to bother. Real photographers pay more attention to their subject's lighting. Color Mode has three settings: Mode Ia is default. It's Nikon's secret code for standard sRGB. sRGB is the world standard for digital images and the Internet. Mode II is secret code for Adobe RGB, which only hackers use. Adobe RGB gives dull colors when used by anyone other than an expert in color management who prints his own work. Even if you're an expert, if you send your work out for printing, 90% of the time the people doing the printing aren't experts and screw it up for you. Ignore desktop armchair hobbyists who bleat on about the broader color gamut of Adobe RGB. I've created and printed 100% chroma grads in Adobe RGB and sRGB and
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Nikon D70/D70s Users Guide saw no difference when printed either on Inkjets or on the $250,000 Lightjet 5000 on Fuji Supergloss. Oh well! Using Adobe RGB is asking for trouble unless you really know what you're doing and have complete control over your process. If you have to ask, don't use Adobe RGB. Mode IIIa is secret code for a standard sRGB mode which gives bolder color. I use this all the time. No, I have no idea how Nikon cooked up these numeric designations. Saturation is the vividness of colors. + Enhanced: I prefer violent color, so I crank it up to +. I'd use ++ or +++ if my D70 had it. 0 Normal: For normal people shots you're probably better off with 0. This is the default. There is no AUTO saturation as on the D200, and on my D200 I leave it cranked to + anyway. - Moderate: - tones down the colors, which I've never liked. Moderate sounds like British understatement. In America we call this "dull and boring." Personally I want colors so bright you have to put on sunglasses, or go directly to B/W. Your interests and taste will differ. There is no native B/W mode in the D70. Hue Adjustment: Don't touch this! This rotates all your colors to different spots around the color wheel. If you use this to fix one color it screws up all the other colors. God only knows why this adjustment is here. - - DONE: This is important: after you play with all the above Optimize Image settings you must select "- - DONE" and "OK" for them to be remembered and take effect. I never trust this and go back in and check that my settings took hold. LONG EXPOSURE NOISE REDUCTION (NR): Forget this. It slows the camera frame rate down to half! If you make exposures of a minute or more it will get rid of the minor purple haze in the corners, but in exchange you have to wait around in the dark for another blank exposure as long as your first time exposure! The D70 uses the second exposure as a reference to subtract from the first image to eliminate any camera-induced hot pixels or haze. Engineers call this "dark frame subtraction." You can see examples of this haze on my D200 Dark Exposure page. I've never seen this haze in any real night photography. It only becomes apparent for astronomically long exposures of darkness (pun intended). The D70 isn't smart enough to disable this automatically at normal shutter speeds, so if you forget and leave it on your frame rate slows to a crawl even in daylight. I never use this setting. IMAGE QUALITY: This duplicates half of the QUAL button. I only use this menu if I want to see this on the back of the camera instead of the top LCD. IMAGE SIZE: This duplicates the other half of the QUAL button. I only use this if I want to see this on the back of the camera instead of the top LCD. WHITE BALANCE: This duplicates the WB button. I only use this menu if I want to see this on the back of the camera instead of the top LCD. ISO: This duplicates the ISO button. I only use this menu if I want to see this on the back of the camera instead of the top LCD. I explain the buttons duplicated by these menus here. CUSTOM (CSM) MENU (pencil icon) Press MENU and select the pencil icon to get to the Custom Settings Menu.
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Nikon D70/D70s Users Guide
First select the "Detailed" mode under Menu > Setup (wrench) Menu > CSM menu, otherwise you'll only to get the first few items!
[R] Menu Reset: This returns everything below to factory default. Play with everything below to your heart's content, since if you do screw anything up this reset will fix it. 01: Beep. For God's sake, turn this to OFF. Beeping cameras annoy everyone and scream "RUDE AMATEUR!" If you insist, set this to ON only in private. 02: Autofocus: Use AF-S (default) for still subjects, and set AF-C (continuous) to track moving subjects, like sports. 03: AF Area Mode: Set Single area (the default) for still subjects. Set Dynamic area for moving subjects. Dynamic Area lets the camera select the AF areas by magic as the subject moves. This really works and is perfect for birds and sports. Use Closest Subject when you hand your camera to a non-photographer. It uses all the AF sensors and guesses that the closest one is your subject. This prevents the common problem with people shots where the camera focuses in the middle, on the wall behind them! 04: AF Assist: This is the little light that helps the camera focus in the dark. Default is ON. Set it to OFF if you're spying on people in the dark and don't want to be noticed. 05: ISO AUTO: This lets the camera increase the ISO automatically as the light fades. I would use it all the time, except that a firmware flaw leaves this active even in manual exposure mode. If you set it to ON you have the option to select the lowest shutter speed the camera will use before it starts to increase the ISO. 06: NO CF Card?: Leave this to LOCK. if you turn it off it will let you take pictures with no card! You accidentally could shoot a wedding and not realize you have no card. When set to ON it locks the camera if you have no card. 07: Image Review: This shows the photo you just took on the monitor after you take it. I set mine to ON, unless I don't plan to look at the monitor after each shot. When you use this remember that the functions of the ISO, WB and QUAL buttons will do things you don't expect after you take a photo, since the camera goes into playback mode for a few seconds after each shot. Because of this I make a habit of tapping the shutter button to return to shooting mode before I make any ISO, WB or QUAL adjustments. Otherwise I often would change something related to playback by accident! 08: Grid Display: These are fine horizontal and vertical lines in the finder. I leave these ON to help me keep my horizons straight. Default is off. 09: EV Step: Your choice of 1/3 or 1/2 stop increments. I prefer the default of 1/3. 10: Exposure Compensation: I leave this in default OFF. This means you have to hold the +/button at the same time as turning the command dial to alter the exposure compensation. If you turn it ON then any turning of the command dial will alter your exposure. 11: Center Weighted: This controls the diameter, in millimeters, of the area of the center weighted meter. I leave mine alone at 8mm, since I never use the center weighted meter anyway. This control allows you to make your center weighted meter see a bigger area to make it more like an averaging
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Nikon D70/D70s Users Guide meter, or make it smaller to be more like a spot. This setting doesn't have any effect on the spot meter. The spot meter is independent of the center weighted meter. 12: BKT Set: This controls what's changed when the camera brackets. You can change it to alter the white balance, or the exposure, or just the flash or ambient light exposure. I don't use bracketing, so I don't use this. 13: BKT Order: This controls the order of the shots made with bracketing. "Normal" first uses the metered exposure and then the altered versions. You may select instead for it to make the underexposed shots first. I don't use this. 14: Command Dial: You may choose to swap which dial does what when setting manual exposure. I leave it in default OFF/NO. 15: AE-L/AF-L: This sets what the AE-L AF-L button locks when held, and how. I leave mine in AE lock only, since in AF-S the AF locks when I press the shutter half way. I use this lock in strong backlight. I point the camera down at something as dark as my subject, press and hold the AE-L button, point the camera at the subject, press and hold the shutter to lock focus, move the camera again to compose, then release the shutter. This gyration of three camera positions saves me from having to use manual exposure and manual focus. The AE-L button locks exposure and the shutter locks the focus. Slick!
TRICK: Hidden in a screen below the first five options under CSM 15 is a sixth very special option: Flash Exposure lock. This is critical for people and pet shots. Nikon keeps this even more secret by calling it "FV Lock." Scroll down past the bottom of the other five options to see it. Select FV Lock and the AE-L AF-L button becomes the Flash Exposure Lock button. Select this and when you press the AE-L AF-L button the flash goes off to measure and preset the exposure. Now every shot fires the flash at the previously measured level without any preflashes. This 1.) eliminates any shutter release delay and 2.) eliminates any potential for subjects eyes blinking.
16: AE Lock: more of the same. I leave this OFF. If you turn it on it locks the exposure when you hold the shutter halfway. This would mimic cheaper point-and-shoot cameras, but is silly since 1.) the camera has a dedicated AE-L button and 2.) one usually wants to lock exposure and focus on different things. If your subject is conducive to locking everything at the same place you probably don't need locks at all. 17: Focus Area Wrap: I leave this off. If I keep pressing the AF selector in one direction the selected AF area goes to the end and stops. To go from far right to far left I have to go left and pass the center. If you turn this to ON (wrap) you can cheat and get to the left sensor by clicking one more time to the right from the far right sensor! This is too confusing for me, so I leave it OFF (no wrap). 18: AF Area Illumination: This lights up the AF areas in the finder. I leave it at AUTO, in which it turns it on in the dark. OFF never turns it on, which is silly, and ON leaves them on even in bright light, which is stupid. 19: Flash Mode: I leave it in TTL, which lets the built in flash expose properly and automatically. Manual sets the power manually. Commander mode lets you control an SB-600 or SB-800 by magic. I have a page on using the Wireless Flash Modes. If you forget to set it back to TTL the flash goes off, but has no effect on the exposure! Be sure to check this before thinking your camera is defective if your flash doesn't come out in your picture. 20: Flash Sign: Leave this ON. Turning it off extinguishes the bolt in the viewfinder if you need flash. This is more than an idiot light: the matrix meter analyzes the subject's lighting ratio and turns on the bolt when the ratio exceeds the camera's (or aesthetics') dynamic range. This is why you'll see the flash bolt come on even in direct sunlight if you have deep shadows.
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Nikon D70/D70s Users Guide LCD Brightness isn't. LCD Brightness sets the viewing angle for the LCD, not the brightness of the backlight. I leave it on 0. Only play with it if you look at the LCD from odd angles or work in very hot or cold temperatures Mirror Lock-Up isn't. This setting is used to lock up the mirror to clean the CCD. I never use this, since I find it easier to set the camera to Bulb and hold open the shutter. It's not a lock up for telephoto lenses on tripods. Video Mode sets the format of the video output. Use NTSC (525 lines, 59.94Hz) in the Americas and Japan, and PAL (625 lines, 50Hz) in Europe. Language: Set yours to Swedish, then see if you can navigate back to English. Fun! Image Comment: This lets you encode a secret text message into every file. Mine is set to (c) KenRockwell.com with my phone number! You see this text looking at the EXIF data in software on a computer. Our Japanese friends have still not provided us with a real symbol here. You set this by going to MENU > Setup Menu (wrench) > Image Comment > Input Comment > (add your message like you did on 1970s video games) > Enter. If you forget to hit ENTER the Japanese will have a laugh on you, since you have to start over. So sorry! When you get your text message spelled out, go to Attach Comment and hit SET so a small checkmark shows. Now go to and select DONE. If you forget to check Attach it won't attach, and if you forget to hit DONE it will also forget everything you just did. So Sorry! I don't write the firmware. To edit or remove a character, select it in the Input Comment screen by holding the checkerboard button and spinning the rear control dial. Now press the Trash button to delete, or add a new character with the four-way navigation switch and press the WB/?/key button to add it. It's great having everything you shoot have your contact info embedded. It also allows you to prove ownership in a third-world country when catching a thief with your camera. Help the cop go through the menus and read your personal ID information. USB: I leave it at mass storage. Use whichever works better with your computer. Dust Ref Photo is used to take a picture of the dust on your sensor. If you pay Nikon another $100 for Nikon Capture software you can use this to erase the dust more easily from your images shot in Raw. You people know who you are. I don't do this! Firmware Version lets you check the firmware version. This lets you confirm if your camera is upto-date with Nikons' free firmware updates. Image Rotation sets a flag in vertical images which keys most software to display the image vertically. It does not actually rotate the images; it just sets a flag. Someday the camera's firmware will work properly and rotate the image itself, but no camera does that yet. That's It! Enjoy!
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Table of Contents
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS.. 3
ABOUT THIS EBOOK... 4
NOTE ON THE SECOND EDITION.. 7
TABLE OF CONTENTS... 9
INTRODUCTION... 16
DEBUNKING SOME MYTHS... 19
CONVENTIONS USED IN THIS BOOK.. 23
D70 SERIES BASICS... 26
D70 SERIES DESIGN... D70 AND D70S CONTROLS.. Front View.. Top View... Back View... Side View... D70 AND D70S DISPLAYS... D70 and D70s Top LCD... D70 and D70s Color LCD.. D70 and D70s Viewfinder.. THE D70 SERIES CCD..
Sensor Filtration... 52
Sensors and Light Alignment... 56
Sensor Longevity... 57
Sensor Wrap-up... 58
35mm Film or Digital?.. POWER... Changing Batteries.. Battery Storage... Alternate Power Sources... Internal Clock Battery.. Battery Life.. Battery Notes... IMAGE STORAGE... CompactFlash..
Solid State CompactFlash... 77
Microdrives... 79
Using CompactFlash... 83
Nikon-Approved Cards... 86
CompactFlash Troubleshooting.. 87
H H H H H
Thom Hogans Complete Guide to the Nikon D70 & D70s
Page 9
Image Formats... 90
Pixels... 92
JPEG.... 93
NEF Format... 101 EXIF... 108 IPTC... 111 DPOF and PictBridge... 112
File Names and Folders... 113
Folders... 114 File Names... 122
CAMERA SETUP... 129 The SET UP MENU.. 129
Date, Time, and Language.. 131 Programming a Comment... 135 LCD Brightness Setting... 137
Image Quality... 139 Viewfinder Adjustment.. 143 Resetting the Camera.. 145
Resetting Basic Settings.. 145 Resetting Custom Settings... 146 The Last Resort Reset.. 146
Firmware Version.. 147
CAMERA AND SHOOTING CONTROLS. 152
METERING AND EXPOSURE.. 152 Metering Modes.. 152
Matrix... 152 Center-weighted.. 156 Spot... 156
Metering with Digital Requires Care.. Options for Evaluating Exposure.. Exposure Modes.. Scene Exposure Modes... ISO Sensitivity...
Long Exposure Noise.. 174 Auto ISO... 178 How ISO Values are Created.. 179 ISO Operating Suggestions... 180
Exposure Bracketing... Exposure Compensation.. White Balance... Changing Color (Optimize Image)..
190 207
Tone Compensation... 208 Hue... 209 Saturation.... 212 Making Optimize Image Settings.. 212
Page 10
LENSES AND FOCUSING.. 214
The Autofocus System... 215
Single Servo versus Continuous Servo Autofocus. 218 Autofocus Area Modes.. 221 Autofocus Summary... 222 Autofocus Assist Lamp... 223
Manual Focus... Sharpening... SHOOTING CONTROLS... Shutter Releases..
232 232
Shutter Lag... 233
Motor Drive... 235
Motor Drive Troubleshooting.. 237
Self Timer.. 238 Remote Control... 240 Depth of Field Preview.. 241
18mm Lens... 243 20mm Lens... 243 24mm Lens... 244 28mm Lens... 244 35mm Lens... 244 50mm Lens... 245 70mm Lens... 245 Diffraction... 245 Other DOF Theories... 246
D70 and D70s Menus... 247
PLAYBACK menu ( icon).. 247 SHOOTING menu ( camera icon).. 248 CSM (custom settings) menu ( pencil icon). 250 SET UP menu ( wrench icon).. 251
ERROR MESSAGES... 254
IMAGE REVIEW AND PLAYBACK.. 260
IMAGE REVIEW... 260 Image Review Options.. 261 The PLAYBACK MENU... 265
Deleting Images... 266 Dealing with Folders... 268 Slide shows... 274 Hiding Images... 275 Printing Images... 277 PictBridge Printing... 279
Television Playback.. 284 CONNECTING TO A COMPUTER.. 286
CUSTOM SETTINGS... 290
Page 11
CUSTOM SETTING #R CUSTOM SETTINGS RESET (MENU RESET). 293 CUSTOM SETTING #1 AUDIO FEEDBACK (BEEP).. 294 CUSTOM SETTING #2 AUTOFOCUS MODE (AUTOFOCUS). 295 CUSTOM SETTING #3 AUTOFOCUS AREA MODE (AF-AREA MODE) 297 CUSTOM SETTING #4 AUTOFOCUS ASSIST LIGHT (AF ASSIST). 299 CUSTOM SETTING #5 AUTOMATIC ISO SETTING (ISO AUTO). 300 CUSTOM SETTING #6 LOCK CAMERA WITH NO COMPACTFLASH (NO CF CARD?)... 303 CUSTOM SETTING #7 IMAGE DISPLAY STATUS (IMAGE REVIEW). 304 CUSTOM SETTING #8 VIEWFINDER GRID DISPLAY (GRID DISPLAY) 305 CUSTOM SETTING #9 EXPOSURE CONTROL INCREMENT (EV STEP) 307 CUSTOM SETTING #10 EXPOSURE COMPENSATION CONTROL (EXP COMP).... 308 CUSTOM SETTING #11 CENTER-WEIGHT CIRCLE SIZE (CENTER WTD) 309 CUSTOM SETTING #12 EXPOSURE BRACKETING METHOD (BKT SET) 310 CUSTOM SETTING #13 BRACKETING ORDER (BKT ORDER). 312 CUSTOM SETTING #14 APERTURE CONTROL DIAL (COMMAND DIAL)...
313 CUSTOM SETTING #15 AE-LOCK BUTTON USE (AE-L/AF-L). 315 CUSTOM SETTING #16 AE LOCK BEHAVIOR (AE LOCK). 317 CUSTOM SETTING #17 FOCUS AREA SELECTION WRAP (FOCUS AREA)...
318 CUSTOM SETTING #18 ACTIVE FOCUS SENSOR ILLUMINATION (AF AREA ILLM)... 319 CUSTOM SETTING #19 FLASH MODE FOR INTERNAL FLASH (FLASH MODE).... 320 CUSTOM SETTING #20 FLASH NEEDED INDICATOR (FLASH SIGN). 323 CUSTOM SETTING #21 FLASH SHUTTER SPEED BARRIER (SHUTTER SPD)...
324 CUSTOM SETTING #22 COLOR LCD ACTIVE TIME (MONITOR OFF) 325 CUSTOM SETTING #23 METER/CAMERA ACTIVE TIME (METER-OFF) 327 CUSTOM SETTING #24 SELF TIMER DELAY SETTING (SELF-TIMER). 328 CUSTOM SETTING #25 REMOTE ACTIVE SETTING (REMOTE). 329
H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H
USING FLASH.. 331
What Happens When Flash is Used.. Flash Basics... Digital Flash Differences.. More Hidden Flash Gotchas..
333 335
Allowable Apertures in Program Mode.. 335 D70 and D70s Flash Head Focal Length Settings. 336
Flash Modes... 336
i-TTL Balanced Fill-Flash.. 337 Standard TTL.. 338
Page 12
Summary of i-TTL Flash Modes.. 339 Non-TTL Flash Modes... 339
Setting Flash Options.. 342
Flash Option Interactions.. 344
Flash Exposure Compensation... Controlled, Repeatable Flash Results. Third Party Flash Units.. Studio Flash... D70 AND D70S INTERNAL FLASH.. Internal Flash Basics...
352 354
To Set TTL on the Internal Flash.. 355 To Set Commander Mode... 356 To Set Manual Flash... 360 Using the Internal Flash for Fill... 362
EXTERNAL FLASH MODELS FOR THE D70 AND D70S. 363 SB-29/SB-29s... 364
Specifications... 364 To Set Manual Flash Exposure.. 365 SB-29 Flash Durations... 366 Using the Modeling Light.. 366 Using the Focus Illuminator.. 367 SB-29 Notes... 367
SB-600... 368
Specifications... 369 To Set TTL Flash.. 370 SB-600 Usable Apertures and Flash Range in TTL mode. 371 To Set Manual Flash... 374 To Manually Set the Zoom Head.. 376 To Set Flash Exposure Compensation. 377 To Set Red-Eye Reduction... 378 SB-600 Notes... 378
SB-800... 380
Specifications... 380 To Set TTL Flash.. 381 SB-800 Usable Apertures and Flash Range in TTL mode. 383 To Set Auto Aperture Flash... 386 To Set Manual Flash... 387 To Set Repeating Flash... 389 To Manually Set the Zoom Head.. 392 To Set the Distance Scale to Feet or Meters.. 393 To Set Flash Exposure Compensation. 393 To Set Red-Eye Reduction... 394 SB-800 Notes... 394
Wireless Flash Notes.. 396 Flash Troubleshooting... 397
USING A D70 OR D70S IN THE FIELD.. 399
Page 13
THE ROUTINE... General Settings You Make Once. Things To Do Before You Head Out on a Shoot. Check Each Time You Turn the Camera ON. Settings You Change Rarely (and then only for a reason) Settings You Change Often.. Things To Do After Each Shooting Session.. KEEPING TRACK OF BATTERIES.. TEMPERATURE CONSIDERATIONS.. FOCAL LENGTH LIMITATIONS.. Panoramas... MAINTAINING IMAGE QUALITY.. How to Interpret Histograms.. Dealing with JPEG... Custom Curves... sRGB Versus Adobe RGB.. SPECIAL LIGHTING ISSUES... UV and Infrared.. Shooting Under Fluorescent Lighting. OTHER FIELD SHOOTING ISSUES... Keeping the CCD Clean.. Camera Doesnt Write to Card.. Tough Subjects (Color, Moir, and the Sun). Humidity... White Balance Settings..
425 425
Ultraviolet... 426 Infrared... 427
WORKING WITH D70 AND D70S IMAGES. 446
D70 AND D70S RELATED SOFTWARE.. Nikon PictureProject.. Nikon View... Nikon Capture...
462 475
Controlling the Camera.. 477 Manipulating Images.. 486 One Image Processed by Capture... 511
Photoshop NEF Filter.. 522 Color Profiles and Color Spaces.. 526
Output on Commercial Printers.. 533
Manipulating Levels and Curves.. 534
Digital Workflow... 536
Other Useful Software... 539
NEF Converters... 540 Image Editors.. 543 Catalog Programs... 545
Page 14
Other Manipulation Tools... 552
PHOTOSHOP ACTIONS... 556 EXCEL WORKBOOKS... 557 A WORD ABOUT COMPUTERS.. 558
ACCESSORIES... 563
LENS COMPATIBILITY.. 566
SPECIFICATIONS.. 570
GETTING SERVICE... 573
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.. 578
Page 15
Technical specifications
| General | |
| Product Type | Digital camera - SLR |
| Width | 5.5 in |
| Depth | 3.1 in |
| Height | 4.4 in |
| Weight | 1.3 lbs |
| Main Features | |
| Resolution | 6.1 Megapixel |
| Color Support | Color |
| Optical Sensor Type | CCD |
| Total Pixels | 6,240,000 pixels |
| Effective Sensor Resolution | 6,100,000 pixels |
| Optical Sensor Size | 15.6 x 23.7mm |
| Light Sensitivity | ISO 200-1600 |
| Shooting Programs | Landscape, portrait mode, close-up, night portrait, night landscape, sports mode |
| Max Shutter Speed | 1/8000 sec |
| Min Shutter Speed | 30 sec |
| X-sync Speed | 1/500 sec |
| Exposure Metering | 3D color matrix, center-weighted, spot |
| Exposure Modes | Program, bulb, automatic, manual, aperture-priority, shutter-priority, i-TTL program flash |
| Exposure Range | EV 0-20 ( ISO 100 ) |
| Exposure Compensation | ±5 EV range, in 1/2 or 1/3 EV steps |
| Auto Exposure Bracketing | 3 steps in 1/2 or 1/3 EV steps |
| White Balance | Custom, automatic, presets |
| White Balance Presets | Incandescent, fluorescent, cloudy, sunlight, flash, shade |
| White Balance Bracketing | Yes |
| Status LCD Display Illumination | Yes |
| Status LCD Display Information | Autofocus mode, shutter speed, frame counter, aperture, red-eye reduction, self-timer mode, film speed, photo quality, photos remaining, memory card status, remote control indicator, white balance indicators, picture resolution, exposure compensation, metering mode, battery condition, program, flash mode |
| Still Image Format | JPEG, RAW, RAW + JPEG |
| Continuous Shooting Speed | 3 frames per second |
| Remote Control | Optional |
| Memory / Storage | |
| Supported Flash Memory | CompactFlash, Microdrive |
| Image Storage | RAW 3008 x 2000 - 5 MB Fine JPEG 3008 x 2000 - 2.9 MB Fine JPEG 2240 x 1488 - 1.6 MB Fine JPEG 1504 x 1000 - 0.8 MB Normal JPEG 3008 x 2000 - 1.5 MB Normal JPEG 2240 x 1488 - 0.8 MB Normal JPEG 1504 x 1000 - 0.4 MB Basic JPEG 3008 x 2000 - 0.8 MB Basic JPEG 2240 x 1488 - 0.4 MB Basic JPEG 1504 x 1000 - 0.2 MB |
| Camera Flash | |
| Camera Flash | Pop-up flash |
| Guide Number (m / ISO 100) | 11 |
| Flash Modes | Fill-in mode, slow synchro, auto mode, flash OFF mode, red-eye reduction |
| Red Eye Reduction | Yes |
| Features | AF illuminator, flash +/- compensation |
| Lens System | |
| Type | Zoom lens - 18 mm - 70 mm - f/3.5-4.5 G IF-ED Nikon AF-S DX |
| Focal Length | 18 mm - 70 mm |
| Focal Length Equivalent to 35mm Camera | 27 - 105mm |
| Focus Adjustment | Automatic, manual |
| Auto Focus | TTL phase detection |
| Auto Focus Points (Zones) | 5 |
| Min Focus Range | 15 in |
| Lens Aperture | F/3.5-4.5 |
| Optical Zoom | 3.8 x |
| Zoom Adjustment | Manual |
| Lens Construction | 13 group(s) / 15 element(s) |
| Filter Size | 67 mm |
| Lens System Mounting | Nikon F |
| Features | Internal focusing system, ED glass, Silent Wave Motor (SWM), aspherical lens |
| Additional Features | |
| Self Timer | Yes |
| Self Timer Delay | 2 - 20 sec |
| Flash Terminal | Hot shoe |
| Additional Features | Direct print, USB 2.0 compatibility, auto power save, DPOF support, display brightness control, depth-of-field preview button, PictBridge support, histogram display, AE lock, AF lock, text input to Exif header |
| Viewfinder | |
| Viewfinder Type | Optical - eye-level mirror pentaprism |
| Field Coverage | 95% |
| Magnification | 0.75x |
| Dioptric Correction Range | -1.6 to +0.5 |
| Viewfinder Frames | Autofocus frame |
| LCD Display Information | Shutter speed, exposure compensation, AE lock, AF-in-focus, flash charge completion, aperture, frame counter, metering system |
| Display | |
| Type | LCD display - TFT active matrix - 2" - color |
| Display Form Factor | Built-in |
| Display Format | 130,000 pixels |
| Connections | |
| Connector Type | 1 x composite video output 1 x USB |
| Expansion Slot(s) | 1 x CompactFlash Card - type I/II |
| Software | |
| Software | Drivers & Utilities, Nikon PictureProject |
| System Requirements for PC Connection | |
| Operating System Support | MS Windows XP, MS Windows 2000, MS Windows ME, MS Windows 98, MS Windows 98 SE, Apple Mac OS X 10.1.5 or later |
| Peripheral Devices | USB port, SVGA monitor, CD-ROM drive |
| System Requirements Details | MacOS X 10.1.5 or later - 64 MB - 60 MB Windows 98/98SE/2000/ME/XP - 64 MB - 60 MB |
| Miscellaneous | |
| Included Accessories | Eyepiece cover, dust cap, body cap, lens cap, shoulder strap |
| Cables Included | Video cable USB cable |
| Power | |
| Power Device | Battery charger - external |
| Battery | |
| Supported Battery | Nikon EN-EL3a |
| Supported Battery Details | 1 x Li-ion rechargeable battery ( included ) |
| Universal Product Identifiers | |
| Brand | Nikon |
| Part Number | 25226 |
| GTIN | 00018208252268, 00018208252145 |
Tags
32SC260 3100MFP S Firmware C-5050 Zoom PVM-2950Q Specs DP-8025 Actionlaser 1100 CDP-CX205 Videostudio 6 70GS-61SN VOM59006 R-871 HL-1040 KDL-22EX302 Ryobi JM80 B2030P DVP-SR300 Drive DI9532 Salton GR82 Easy 155 TX-P42c10E 917-299011 Ryobi 790R QV-8000SX DCD-685 Cft2200 TU-12H KM500C Ixus 700 6g ED 5 1 Pokemon HF100 DT-1505 SGH-X100 HTS8140 Siege 46 MO V-MAX-2000 P1292RB PAC290 Edition Friac W600 YZF600R-2007 EP-702A MD 4688 HT-CN410DVH KDC-132CR WX-5000MDX HF 3461 IG-80 V101 Printer Price 500LC Scenic VOM-78T S20PRO ICN 520 Printer Dock T9500 VP-DC171WI Camera Nexstar 4SE VN-1100 CT-29K30ET KX-TG1312SP VGX-TP3z B RX-DS19 AX303P 42LF6 XS-L102p5S MP508M PSK75 PCG-GRX700K ASF2750 Printer 2433BW KX-TCD150CE 122E EN ESP 5 WF-T5402TC Xtant X603 Review Photo VC8706V XVC20E Acoustics GT50 VPC-HD1000EX Galactica LA22B450c4M Dpac120068 EMX620 Wtmc352SUC User Accessories 32PFL5522D 12 Battery Delonghi 3107 Battle CQ-DFX301U DCR-DVD450E CDE-7870 F1415 SG-80 Manual Pdf MR-rack Deskjet 3845
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