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IQ between D610, D750 and D810?
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Jan 11, 2015 16:45:43   #
Greenguy33 Loc: Rhode Island
 
Jackdoor wrote:
I had no problem with my D800 at minus 40 in Northern Sweden last January. Batteries stop working after about half an hour though, but fully recover once warmed up.


I am wondering if there is something wrong with my D7100, or if that is normal for a D7100?

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Jan 11, 2015 17:00:29   #
SonnyE Loc: Communist California, USA
 
Greenguy33 wrote:
I am wondering if there is something wrong with my D7100, or if that is normal for a D7100?


Well, it's normal for me anymore.
I like being warm.

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Jan 11, 2015 17:05:09   #
Jackdoor Loc: Huddersfield, Yorkshire.
 
Greenguy33 wrote:
I am wondering if there is something wrong with my D7100, or if that is normal for a D7100?


I'd be surprised if what you describe is usual, but it is within specification: http://forum.nikonrumors.com/discussion/1690/operating-in-very-low-temperatures/p1

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Jan 11, 2015 22:08:52   #
MtnMan Loc: ID
 
Hkhabe wrote:
Your opinion is not shared by most professional reviewers...


No one can tell whose opinion you do not support. You need to use "quote reply".

The reason is your message shows up at the bottom of the list, not below the one you reply to.

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Jan 11, 2015 22:54:37   #
SonnyE Loc: Communist California, USA
 
MtnMan wrote:
No one can tell whose opinion you do not support. You need to use "quote reply".

The reason is your message shows up at the bottom of the list, not below the one you reply to.


..also why it is ignored. ;)

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Jan 14, 2015 14:08:26   #
Hkhabe Loc: Carlsbad, CA
 
SonnyE wrote:
..also why it is ignored. ;)


That would be your opinion re the D610, D750, D810

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Jan 18, 2015 07:16:33   #
rbfanman
 
Go with the 810.

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Jan 18, 2015 13:56:23   #
Dana C Loc: Buhl, Idaho
 
[ People don't make a habit of viewing 24x36 prints at 18" unless they are photographers, and nearsighted.[/quote]

While am a retired amateur and getting better all the time, your comment about peer photographer critics brings up a revelation that an amateur budding enthusiast like myself has had.
As I get better, I become more critical of my early shots. However, students, teachers and parents looking at them on my site at Zenfolio think they are great shots of their kids playing basketball and that I am a good photographer

What this tells me that while it is nice to get compliments from a pro or an expert, the ultimate judge of the picture is the person that was intended to see it. Parents, bird lovers, friends, family, animal lovers party goers and so on are who really counts.

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Jan 18, 2015 14:01:20   #
Dana C Loc: Buhl, Idaho
 
...to finish m thought. For most people viewing your pictures aside from people on this site and most on this site, the IQ difference attributable to the camera won't be visible. The entire formula includes the lens chosen, settings and as they say view discretion and so on.

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Jan 18, 2015 14:07:03   #
Greenguy33 Loc: Rhode Island
 
Dana C wrote:
...to finish m thought. For most people viewing your pictures aside from people on this site and most on this site, the IQ difference attributable to the camera won't be visible. The entire formula includes the lens chosen, settings and as they say view discretion and so on.


Dana, thanks for your thoughts. So a D610 with good glass should produce the same quality (to the naked eye) as the D810?

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Jan 18, 2015 14:16:50   #
joer Loc: Colorado/Illinois
 
Greenguy33 wrote:
Thanks Capture48!
A follow up question...would it be a better idea (money wise) to look for a used D800 or D800e, instead of a D810? Would I notice a difference?


I have the D800E and D810. The only difference you would notice is that your bank account would be in better shape if you went for the D800E.

The most practical advantage of a 36MP sensor is the ability to crop. All your lenses extend farther if you want.
There are high quality images with in images.

The down side might be the large file size when you process raw images.

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