Testseek.com have collected 106 expert reviews of the Nikon D700 and the average rating is 91%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Nikon D700.
August 2008
(91%)
106 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(100%)
9 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
910100106
The editors liked
Like the D3 the D700 automatically detects DX lenses
Which have a smaller exposure circle
And shows a crop rectangle in the viewfinder. You lose some pixels but you get a perfect picture. Images are noise free with wide dynamic range and beautiful to...
Full-frame sensor
Smaller and lighter body than the D3
Useful Live View
Virtual horizon
Comfortable to use
The editors didn't like
This is not a complaint
Merely an observation. With a full frame sensor depth of field is reduced
By comparison with an APS sized sensor
For any given f stop. Closer attention needs to be paid of ISO
Aperture and shutter speed. Fortunately the sens...
Abstract: The D700 is Nikon’s second full-frame D-SLR after the ground-breaking D3 and the good news is, it shares many of the same features but in a slightly more compact body. Sharing the same chip as the Nikon D3, the Nikon D700 has a resolution of 12.1Mp but...
Deciding whether the D700 is worth its substantial price tag proves far more difficult than almost any other part of this test. The image quality, most of the handling and even the less tangible ‘want factor’ should all make the D700 the perfect balan...
Excellent photo quality as high as ISO 6,400; fast focus and shooting, even in low light; first-rate build quality and control layout
Relatively heavy; low resolution for its class; viewfinder only provides 95 per cent coverage and lacks interchangeable focusing screens; occasional issues with automatic white balance under artificial light
As long as you don't need seriously high-resolution photos, video capture, or machine-gun-fast sports shooting, the Nikon D700 has everything you need in a pro full-frame camera for a reasonable price ...
The Nikon D700 is blisteringly fast and capture incredible results in near darkness. You get a choice of uncompressed TIFF as well as JPEG or Raw files, making the Nikon D700 a solid ‘best of both worlds’ compromise between D300 and D3 models...
Where to start? Anyone who’s serious about photography will be drooling over the D700’s specs: a full-frame 12-megapixel sensor that serves up images smoother than Daniel Craig’s dinner jacket, machine-gun rapid 5fps continuous shooting...
You might need to sell a few snaps to the red tops to afford the D700 – and that’s before you’ve even thought about the top quality lenses you’ll want on front (budget at least another £300). Don’t worry about the sheer...
Everything you need to go pro except a long lens and the willingness to stick it through Madonna’s front window. This stunningly high-powered camera should last, well, forever.Nikon D700 is tagged with Nikon, slr, camera, auto focus and dual live vi...
Abstract: You have to hand it to Nikon: having arrived a full five years late to the full-frame DSLR market (Canon got there first with its Eos 1Ds in 2002), its shown up with style. The top-end D3 has been wowing professionals since its release last year and w...
Published: 2008-07-01, Author: Leonard , review by: asia.cnet.com
Abstract: Full-frame is probably what every aspiring photographer dreams of at night. At one point, it was almost unattainable as this feature was present only in high-end models that cost a limb or two. Then along came Canon which released the EOS 5D and made f...