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Review Summary
2015-07-13T21:00:00
I purchased the camera as a birthday present for my granddaughter. I wanted to give her a "real" camera with a viewfinder--not something to hold out in front of her to look at an LCD screen. The D70s is a really good camera for a 12-year old to use. I am extremely happy with how clean the camera is, and having run it through its paces, everything works!
BARBARA A.
2015-06-28T20:00:00
The camera is very good and easy to use. But looking at the new cameras it could use video and a touchscreen. When ever I go plane spotting its shop ready and the pictures ARE CRYSTAL CLEAR!
Planespotternikon
2015-05-18T21:00:00
The camera looked brand new. Even the LCD screen was not scratched, so I'm thinking they must have assumed the sensor would be clean. There were about four dust specs and one huge black region on every photo. If a brand new looking dSLR like this can have such a dirty sensor, I'll have to stick with film. You get a new sensor with every picture.
LYLE J.
2013-05-03T20:00:00
Easy camera to use that functions great. All the megapixels you will ever need for the consumer user. Construction is good and ergonomics is great. Bracketing is a plus to get the ideal exposure. Only complaint is the cheap camera case that won't protect your camera. If you are looking to put nice photos on your computer with ease,then this is the camera for you. A year later I bought the Nikon F100 film camera new and found out that film was better than the digital in overall quality. Digital is nice for instant viewing on a computer but there is still nothing that comes close to film.
Photo b.
2013-03-27T20:00:00
Besides the 6megapixel sensor it is a fantastic camera it has a big steady grip,i have managed to take so many good pictures.Even in low light the photos are very good
apostolis
2012-06-09T20:00:00
Although this camera is "old" , It works great. I used it for about 8 months and I had an amazing run with it, despite a few minor flaws - 2in. Screen - FOR problem with some CF cards - Mirror gets dirty easily It is still a great camera Love the feel of it in my hands, and its' two rollers are designed perfectly.
∆
2012-06-05T20:00:00
I have had several camera's before I got this Nikon and it is a great camera. I have temors so some days i shake uncontrollably and i still go out and take great pictures while shaking.
Attyfy417
2012-04-09T20:00:00
its amazing using this beast in minus 40 it still kicks drop it down stars its fine if you want a good beginner camera that you can manually control but has 6 mp small screen get it .
d70s m.
2012-01-14T19:00:00
My dad had owned my Nikon D70 for about 6years before me, when he upgraded, to the SMASHING Nikon D7000! I got his little D70. Itself is an amazing camera, just for an amateur, but when you compare it to dads D7000, it's a baby. But in general the features are good. And all around, it's a great camera.
antiquebicycles
2012-01-05T19:00:00
hello i bought Nikon D70S 5 years back, i am a professional photographer, i like this camera very much, compared with latest only the problem is fixels expect that great perfornance.
Shabir
2011-12-01T19:00:00
I purchased my D70s over 6 years ago and continue to share great time and memories with it. Works under all sorts of conditions and never failed to capture great shots. Would be considered slow by today's standards though, but overall, for a nature enthusiast, who really needs more than 3 fps? The intrinsic design flaw that keeps on displaying errors from time to time is rather irritating. Despite the newest generation of faster 12 and 18M machines I bought since then, I still prefer to cary my good old rugged friend outside when conditions get rough. Just like an old love affair!
Dwako
2011-11-23T19:00:00
Perfect for any shooting situation.Made very well for being produced in Thailand.
Photo B.
2011-11-15T19:00:00
I was going to get the canon rebel as my first camara but my dad gave me his company's camara and I love it! It takes a while to take a picture though, you have to hold down the button for a while. I have lots of great shots, I need to find a program like photoshop but not as expensive. It's kind of hard to though. There are lots of settings to manage with.
RockNRollForLife
2011-04-17T20:00:00
This is a good camera, has a very good performance and nice features. Perhaps with continuous photographing a bit slow..Some software problems sometimes with the memory cards. I recommend it for amateur photographers not for pros
MCPhotography
2011-04-13T20:00:00
Top of the line product with excellent quality imagery; this camera doesn't set the bar, it is the bar!
NikonShooter
2010-11-16T19:00:00
I have used the DF-70 for several years for work. I have had the D-70 serviced by Nikon about three years ago due to FORMAT problems with the memoiry card. I have purchased several chips for the D-70, all resulting in FOR problems. It seems the small prongs that connect to the chip inside the camera go bad after several years of wear and tear. This seems to me a poor design on Nikons part. Very hard camera to get serviced. Iam looking foa a new Nikon DSL camera, and will probably go with the D3000....and or d300?
mq
2010-10-28T20:00:00
I had the D70s for a couple years. I use it for Home business. I have taken care of and never has had any drops or anything else. It just started to have FOR error and CHR error. Looking in the internet I found out that it is a commen problem with the D70 and D70s. I have had a Nikon N60 film camera for years and have never had 1 thing go wrong. My D70s has been used about 1/4 of the amount of the N60 film camera. I would not buy the D70 or D70s.
California P.
2010-07-20T20:00:00
As you may already understand from the title of this review, I use to work with for several years with wonderful film photo material such as Nikon F-series (from F original up to the 5) and superb Leicas M and R. Professionally speaking Nikon has been my main 35mm furnisher and we have a long loving affair even if I was not always following them instantly on their move. I was found of their Nikon F3HP and F4 and of their always charming Nikkor AIs like 24mm, Micro 55mm, 105/2,5 and 300/4,5. AF lenses such as 20/2.8, 85/1.8, 80-200/2.8 and 300/4 have got my full respect for the maker. This is a long introduction to indicate by background references. Digital evolution even from the yearly years appears to me as inevitable. Such as technological, communication and pollution issues has gradually put films out of the business especially in professional fields. So during the last two years I have made the commitment to go on digital for taking my pictures instead of scan negatives and slides. After a long way of searching and with the kind help of other professional friend fellows I did in buying a new Nikon D70s along with the DX AF-S NIKKOR 18-70/3.5-4.5G ED. Today I will give you just a first hand impression. The camera and the lens seem to be well built. The handling is very good and the camera/lens combination is light. Controls are following the traditions of all Nikon electronics cameras since F801/N8008. The viewfinder is good but you have to adapt ourselves to the tunnel effect view which took me a couple of days. Doing the focus manually doesn’t give any problem in particular but make sure to set camera and lens to the “M” position. Information’s inside viewfinder are non-obstructive and done in a simple direct manner. For exposure setting the camera controls are very user friendly and most of all very intuitive. In low light conditions I have found that the D70s metering system has a tendency to underexpose the subject especially when using the matrix exposure pattern. In that case I have used instead the center lecture option with success most of the time. Manual metering is a pleasure to work with but indications are showed only into the inside reflex viewer. The battery pack has an amazing longevity. With the D70s you will become a happy multiple-trigger-man in a short time. I have read the full and instructive manual that come with camera and it have gave a profound impression of what are the real possibilities of the D70s. And let me tell that I am not even in professional area that this camera will use fully. For example you can really do exact color metering by using the “WB” white balance option without any traditional use of expenses color meter and not practical color correcting filters. I have also begun to appreciate the flash system which seems to be very flexible. When using the integrated flash be sure to pull out the lens hood to prevent dark bottom spot. Menus are well presented and can be sophisticated as you may wish or not. Even the Nikon Picture Project software offer with the camera is useful but I am hoping to get and try the Nikon Capture 4 in a near future. In brief for these first impressions, I have really appreciated from the beginning to work and take pictures with the D70s. I am looking forward to get a “picture quality” point of view. (This review has been previously released in February 2006)
danielm46
Single-lens reflex digital camera
6.1 million
RGB CCD, 23.7 x 15.6 mm; total pixels: 6.24 million
3008 x 2000 [L], 2240 x 1448 [M], 1504 x 1000 [S]
200 to 1600 (ISO equivalent) in steps of 1/3 EV
CompactFlash (CF) Card (Type I and II ) and Microdrive
Compressed NEF (RAW): 12-bit lossless compression, JPEG: JPEG baseline-compliant
Exif 2.21, Compliant DCF 2.0 and DPOF
Auto (TTL white balance with 1,005 pixels RGB sensor), six manual modes with fine-tuning, preset white balance, white balance bracketing possible
2.0-in., 130,000-dot, low-temperature polysilicon TFT LCD with brightness adjustment
1 frame: Thumbnail (4 or 9 segments); Magnifying playback; Slide show; Histogramindication; Highlight point display; Auto image rotation
Card format, All frames delete, Selected frames delete
NTSC or PAL
USB: Mass Storage and PTP selectable
Up to 36 characters of alphanumeric text input available with LCD monitor and multi-selector; stored in Exif header
1) DX Nikkor: All functions supported; 2) Type G- or D-AF Nikkor: All functions supported; 3) Micro Nikkor 85mm F2.8D: All functions supported except some exposrue modes; 4) Other AF Nikkor (excluding lenses for F3AF): All functions supported except 3D Color Matrix Metering, i-TTL balanced Fill-Flash for digital SLR;
1) DX Nikkor: All functions supported; 2) Type G- or D-AF Nikkor: All functions supported; 3) Micro Nikkor 85mm F2.8D: All functions supported except some exposrue modes; 4) Other AF Nikkor (excluding lenses for F3AF): All functions supported except 3D Color Matrix Metering, i-TTL balanced Fill-Flash for digital SLR;
Equivalent in 35 mm [135] format is approx. 1.5 times lens focal length
Fixed-eyelevel penta-Dach-mirror type; built-in diopter adjustment (-1.6 to +0.5m -1)
18 mm (-1.0 m -1)
B-type BriteView clear matte screen II with superimposed focus brackets and On-Demand grid lines
Approx. 95%
Approx. 0.75x with 50 mm lens at infinity; -1.0 m-1
Focus indications, AE/FV lock indicator, Shutter speed, Aperture value, Exposure/Exposure compensation indicator, Exposure mode, Flash output level compensation, Exposure compensation, Number of remaining exposures, Flash-ready indicator
TTL phase detection by Nikon Multi-CAM900 autofocus module with AF-assist illuminator (approx. 0.5 m to 3.0 m) Detection range: EV -1 to +19 (ISO 100 equivalent, at normal temperature: 20°C/68°F)
1) Autofocus (AF): single-servo AF (AF-S); continuous servo AF (AF-C); predictive focus tracking automatically activated according to subject status2) Manual focus (M)
Can be selected from 5 focus areas
1) Single Area AF, 2) Dynamic Area AF,3) Closest Subject Priority Dynamic Area AF
Focus can be locked by pressing shutter-release button halfway (single-servo AF)or by pressing AE-L/AF-L button
TTL full-aperture exposure metering system(1) 3D color matrix metering with 1,005-pixel RGB sensor(2) Center-weighted: Weight of 75% (8mm dia. circle) given to 6, 8, 10, or 12 mm dia. circle in center of frame, or weighting based on average of entire frame (3) Spot: Meters 2.3 mm dia. circle (about 1% of frame) centered on active focus area
TTL full-aperture exposure metering system(1) 3D color matrix metering with 1,005-pixel RGB sensor(2) Center-weighted: Weight of 75% (8mm dia. circle) given to 6, 8, 10, or 12 mm dia. circle in center of frame, or weighting based on average of entire frame (3) Spot: Meters 2.3 mm dia. circle (about 1% of frame) centered on active focus area
CPU coupling
Digital Vari-program (Auto, Portrait, Landscape, Close up, Sports, Night landscape, Night portrait)
Programmed Auto (P) with flexible program; Shutter-Priority Auto (S); Aperture Priority Auto (A); Manual (M)
+/-5 EV in increments of 1/3 or 1/2 EV
Luminosity locked at detected value with AE-L/AF-L button
Two or three frames +/-2EV in 1/3 or 1/2 steps
1) Single frame shooting mode. 2) Continuous shooting mode: approx. 3 frames per second. 3) Self-timer/remote control mode. 4) Delayed remote mode: 2 sec. delay. 5) Quick response remote mode
Combined mechanical and CCD electronic shutter,30 to 1/8000 sec in steps of 1/3 or 1/2 EV, bulb
X-contact only; flash synchronization at up to 1/500 second
1) TTL: TTL flash control by 1,005 pixel RGB sensor
Built-in Speedlight: i-TTL balanced Fill-Flash or standard i-TTL flash (spot metering or mode dial set to [M])
SB-800 or 600: i-TTL balanced Fill-Flash or standard i-TTL flash (spot metering)
2) Auto aperture: Available with SB-800 and 600 with CPU lens
3) Non-TTLAuto: Available with Speedlights such as SB-800, 80DX, 28DX, 28, 27, and 22s
4) Range-priority manual available with SB-800 and 600
1) Front-Curtain Sync (normal sync), 2) Red-Eye Reduction, 3) Red-Eye Reduction with Slow Sync, 4) Slow Sync, 5) Rear-Curtain Sync
Auto flash with auto pop-up[P], [S], [A], [M]: manual pop-up with button release
Guide number (ISO 200/ISO 100, m): approx. 15/11 (manual full 17/12)
-3 to +1 EV in increments of 1/3 or 1/2EV
Standard ISO hot-shoe contact with safety lock provided
Electronically controlled timer with 2 to 20 second duration
When CPU lens is attached, lens aperture can be stopped down and previewed by pressing the preview button
Via Remote Cord MC-DC1 (optional) or Wireless Remote Control ML-L3 (optional)
One rechargeable Nikon Li-ion battery EN-EL3a or EN-EL3,ithium batteries (with sThree CR2 lithium batteries (with optional MS-D70 CR2 battery holder)
Approx. 5.5 x 4.4 x 3.1 inches
Approx. 21 oz without battery, memory card, body cap, or monitor cover
Awesome features for an amateur Camera!
By antiquebicycles
My dad had owned my Nikon D70 for about 6years before me, when he upgraded, to the SMASHING Nikon D7000! I got his little D70. Itself is an amazing camera, just for an amateur, but when you compare it to dads D7000, it's a baby. But in general the features are good. And all around, it's a great camera.
Great Camera
By Attyfy417
I have had several camera's before I got this Nikon and it is a great camera. I have temors so some days i shake uncontrollably and i still go out and take great pictures while shaking.
Nikon D70s interchangeable-lens digital SLR camera inherits the award-winning image quality, high performance and user-friendliness of the D70 while introducing refinements that further help photographers capture precious moments as they unfold
Powering up in a mere 0.2 seconds, the D70s is ready to shoot the instant it is turned on. Shutter release time lag is minimized for quick response that makes shooting more efficient and more enjoyable. It is also capable of shooting a rapid 3 frames per second for a continuous burst of 144 pictures
Shutter speeds of 30 to 1/8,000 sec. ensure full creative control. The built-in auto pop-up flash can synchronize at shutter speeds of up to 1/500 sec. for great fill flash effects. Its new optimized design also increases flash coverage to support lenses as wide as 18mm. Sensitivity can be set between ISO 200 to 1600 or controlled automatically (AUTO ISO) across the same range of settings to maximize available light.
The 5-area autofocus system continues to feature a cross-type sensor in the center, broad frame coverage, and class-leading low light detection, but is improved to deliver greater precision with fast, more consistent subject acquisition and improved focus tracking. Also included is an AF-assist illuminator to help maximize performance when shooting in low lighting conditions.
Nikon's 3D Color Matrix Metering with 1,005-pixel sensor delivers consistently accurate exposure automatically by measuring brightness, color, contrast, selected focus area, and subject-to-camera distance information for each shot, and then referencing the results against an onboard database of 30,000 scenes from actual photography. Variable center-weighted metering and a choice of five spot meters are also available, as are exposure compensation, and auto exposure bracketing.
The D70s produces natural coloration by matching white balance to the light source of the shot. Advanced Auto white balance is capable of handling most situations, although the flexible options include white balance bracketing, a choice of six specific manual settings with fine-tuning, as well as a preset option for using a gray or white object as a reference for white balance.
Controls are located for easier access and smoother operation. Newly designed menus are presented clearly and in plain language on the large 2.0-inch LCD monitor, while intuitive help dialogs are available for on-the-spot reference to the respective menu selections.
Remote control options are also expanded for the D70s, with the new optional Remote Cord (MC-DC1) adding greater convenience and ease of use in a wider variety of shooting situations, including long exposures and close-ups. Cable-free operation is also available with the optional Wireless Remote Control ML-L3. A third option involves Nikon Capture software, which can be used to control the D70s from a computer via the USB connection.