Nikon Z 7 First Impressions Review

Nikon Z 7 First Impressions Review
ÔÎÒÎ: dpreview.com

Nikon Z 7 First Impressions Review The Nikon Z 7 is the company's first full-frame mirrorless camera: a 46MP, 4K-capable machine built around a variant of the D850's BSI CMOS chip, but with the addition of on-sensor phase detection.

It's designed to offer an experience familiar to existing Nikon DSLR shooters in a smaller, lighter camera. The Z 7 is based around the all-new Nikon Z-mount but an adapter is available for use with existing Nikkor F-mount lenses.

We were lucky enough to get our hands on a pre-production camera before launch and we're impressed, despite the model we used running very early firmware. The build quality is great and the interface is responsive, while JPEG images show pleasing color and good detail. From our initial impressions of image quality it also seems that the camera balances noise and detail retention well as light levels drop.

We have a few reservations regarding the autofocus interface on our pre-production camera (though its accuracy was quite good), but overall, the Z 7 we used felt very polished. This is all the more impressive given that the Z 7 is Nikon's first entrant in the full-frame mirrorless space and the company is clearly aiming it at the higher-end of the market.

Key features:

45. 7MP BSI-CMOS sensor with on-sensor phase detection

In-body 5-axis stabilization (rated to 5EV)

493 PDAF points with 90% horizontal and vertical coverage

ISO 64-25,600 (expandable to 102,400)

Up to 9 fps shooting (JPEG and 12-bit Raw)

3. 69M-dot OLED viewfinder

2. 1M-dot tilting touch LCD

OLED top plate display

Single XQD card slot

UHD 4K capture up to 30p

10-bit 4:2:2 N-Log output over HDMI

Up to 100Mbps H. 264 8-bit internal video capture

SnapBridge Wi-Fi system with Bluetooth, including to-PC transfer

Pre-production sample JPEG.
ISO 64 | 1/500 sec | F7. 1 | Shot using the the Nikon Z 24-70mm F4 S lens at 51mm
Photo by Wenmei Hill

We see the Z 7 as not only a 'D850 without a mirror', but also (perhaps more) 'a D850 with a more consistent stills/video experience and greatly improved video AF. ' And straight out of the gate, that makes it a pretty well-rounded do-everything camera.

Three 'Z-mount' lenses will be available initially: a 35mm F1. 8, a 50mm F1. 8 and a 24-70mm F4. Nikon has also announced it is developing a 58mm F0. 95 'Noct' lens and has published a roadmap to show how it plans to expand the system. A battery grip will also be available at some point, but a release date hasn't yet been set.

Three Nikkor S (for 'silver') lenses will be available for the Z-mount initially: a 50mm F1. 8, a 24-70mm F4 and a 35mm F1. 8

Nikon has also released an F-to-Z mount adapter (formally known as the FTZ adapter) that will allow the use of F-mount lenses on the new cameras. This has a mechanical aperture lever built in, allowing full use of AF-S and AF-I lenses. Older AF-D lenses will offer auto exposure and AI lenses will have full metering. There's no aperture tab for use with 'AI' or older lenses, though.

What's new and how it compares

The Z 7 isn't just a D850 without a mirror: we look at the key additions and what the Z 7 offers. . .

Read more

Body and handling

How the Z 7 feels in the hand may be crucial to its acceptance. We have a look at the camera and the control points it offers.

Read more

Operation and controls

The Z 7's user interface will be very familiar to existing Nikon shooters. Up to a point, that is.

Read more

Z 7 Autofocus behavior

The Z 7 offers impressive autofocus performance, but there's some adjustments to be made.

Read more

Video

Nikon has done a lot to enhance the Z 7's video, even if that's not immediately obvious from the specs.

Read more

Thoughts so far

What does the Z 7 say about Nikon's direction, who its trying to appeal to and what does it mean for F-mount users?

Read more

Sample gallery

We've had time with a pre-production Nikon Z 7 in the field, and have preliminary JPEG images that look quite impressive.

Read more

.

nikon more lenses read actionbutton

2018-8-23 08:01

nikon more → Ðåçóëüòàòîâ: 4 / nikon more - ôîòî


Ôîòî: dpreview.com

Nikon Z5 initial review

$(document). ready(function() { SampleGalleryStripV2({"galleryId":"9842059286","isMobile":false}) }) The Nikon Z5 is an entry-level full-frame mirrorless camera that looks and handles almost exactly like its higher-end Z-mount siblings, the Z6 and Z7. dpreview.com »

2020-09-01 16:00

Ôîòî: dpreview.com

Nikon Z7 Review

Nikon Z7 Review 89%Overall scoreJump to conclusion The Nikon Z7 is the company's most well-rounded camera to date: it's as well spec'd and well-suited for video capture as it is for stills, and the quality of both is impressive. dpreview.com »

2018-11-05 17:00

Ôîòî: dpreview.com

Ten things we're hoping for from the Nikon D850

Ten things we're hoping for from the Nikon D850 Nikon has announced the development of a the D850 - the long-awaited successor to the D810. As we've come to expect from such announcements in the past, Nikon is being vague on exact details, but promises that the D850 will be 'a formidable tool for creators who will not compromise on exceptional image quality and versatility. dpreview.com »

2017-07-25 07:00

Ep. 121: Is Sony Ready to Buy Nikon? + more!

Episode 121 of the PetaPixel Photography Podcast. Download MP3 –  Subscribe via iTunes or RSS! Featured: Portrait photographer Hannah Couzens In This Episode If you subscribe to the PetaPixel Photography Podcast in iTunes, please take a moment to rate and review us and help us move up in the rankings so others interested in photography may find us. Portrait photographer Hannah […] petapixel.com »

2016-11-03 10:19