Nikon D5: 12 FPS, 20MP FX, 4K Video
Nikon D5: 12 FPS, 20MP FX, 4K Video
Nikon D5: 12 FPS, 20MP FX, 4K Video
VARIJANTA
- NIKON D610
- 18-55 ako ima G stakla on je jako lep objektiv za pocetak jeftin je i potpuno je ok cena
kvalitet.
- Za potrete može novi AF-S 50mm f/1.8G
- 70-200
Nikon D5
12 FPS, 20MP FX, 4K video
Sample Images Intro Lens Compatibility
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service, return policies and selection. Thanks for helping me help you! Ken.
Adorama pays top dollar for your used gear, especially the D4, D4s and
every Nikon DSLR.
This is brand-new and from a well-rated seller. It's $1,300 off because it's gray
market, meaning that it's the same Nikon D5, but instead of a real Nikon USA
warranty, the seller offers their own warranty.
For $100 off I wouldn't touch this, but for a $1,300 discount on a brand-new
D5, I'd take the chance.
The key here is that not only does the D5 easily track real targets at 12 FPS
wide-open at f/2.8 with my 17-year-old lens, that it also easily found Katie's
face automatically and focussed on it, not on the interfering feet, with no input
from me.
Not only is it sharp, but color and tone are beautiful, as we expect from Nikon,
which is handily superior to every other brand, save for Canon, who is just as
good.
Ralph's at dusk, 8:12PM, 26 July 2016. 2016 Nikon D5, 1996 Nikon 35-
105mm AF-D at 35mm, f/3.5 at 1/40 at Auto ISO 1,100. bigger or much
bigger to explore on your computer.
2016 Mercedes S550, 27 July 2016. 2016 Nikon D5, 1996 Nikon 35-105mm
AF-D at 105mm, f/4.5 at 1/125 at Auto ISO 110. bigger or full-resolution file to
explore on your computer.
2014 Mercedes S550 interior, 27 July 2016. 2016 Nikon D5, 1996 Nikon 35-
105mm AF-D at 62mm, f/4 at 1/60 at Auto ISO 11,400. bigger or camera-
original file to explore on your computer.
Even with a 20-year-old zoom, images look great at whatever ISO is needed,
in this case, ISO 11,400!
Ryan shops for ties under crummy store lighting, 27 July
2016. 2016 Nikon D5, 1996 Nikon 35-105mm AF-D at 80mm, f/4.2 at 1/125 at
Auto ISO 4,000. bigger or camera-original file to explore on your computer.
What makes this image special is that regardless of your thoughts on the shirt,
the color balance is dead-nuts on, and this is shot under random fluorescent
lighting in a discount store with Auto White Balance. Very few cameras get
decent color in AWB under fluorescent light; only the D500 does this as well.
Introduction
Top Sample Images Intro Lens Compatibility
Nikon always says that their new cameras are awesome, and it's usually just
the same old thing with a new feature or two. With the D5's genuinely new AF
system and Auto WB performance, along with ultra-high ISOs and 10-20%
higher frame rate than the old D4 and D4s, the D5 really does let us shoot
more better, which gives pro shooters significant competitive advantages.
It comes in two versions: one has two CF-card slots and the other has two
XQD slots. I have the CF version, while most people who buy the D5 use
XQD.
New
● Electronic front-curtain shutter for quieter operation with less vibration (set
at MENU > Custom > d6), but doesn't make much difference unless you have
the mirror locked-up.
● 12 FPS with AF and AE tracking (14 FPS with locked-up mirror in the lab)
● Touch Screen.
● Auto ISO now has separate settings for Maximum ISO with flash and
without flash. Also with flash now has options to set the Auto ISO to optimize
itself for the subject and background together, or only for the subject.
● What Nikon used to call the Creative Lighting System (CLS) for wireless
flash is now called Advanced Wireless Lighting (AWL). It now works with both
radio or optical control. See Flash Usage.
● Can control radio slaves, but only if you use the WR-R10 as a master
wireless controller and WR-A10 adapter to connect the WR-R10 to the D5.
See Flash Usage.
● 4K video.
● Advance mode dial now has detents to make it easier to know where to
stop, or to set in the dark by feel.
● Comes in two versions: either with two CF-card slots or with two XQD slots.
Good
● Nikon's fastest DSLR ever: 12 FPS with full AF and auto exposure tracking.
● Excellent battery life; figure at least 3,000 shots per charge when shooting
action sequences.
● Easy to save and recall one complete camera state as a file on your
memory card, but —
Bad
● No fast recall modes for different camera setting; the D5 still uses Nikon's
awful settings banks that take too long to select and don't recall all we need,
like AF settings, anyway. The D7200, D610 and D750 are much better here.
The D5 is a scorchingly fast camera when set, but it takes too long to reset it
from one kind of photo to another.
● Big.
● Heavy.
● Expensive.
Missing
● No ability to trigger radio slaves unless you use the outboard WR-R10 as a
master wireless controller and WR-A10 adapter to connect the WR-R10 to the
D5. See Flash Usage.
● No power switch lock; easy to knock on or off by accident and miss shots.
● No auto brightness control for the LCD. The D4s had this. You can set the
LCD brightness separately for Live View versus Playback and Menus, but now
there are more menu clicks needed to select between these to change
brightnesses as you move outdoors or indoors.
● No full-frame AF; it may have a lot of points, but they're mostly near the
center of the image. No other full-frame DSLR has full-frame AF, either.
Lens Compatibility
Top Sample Images Intro Lens Compatibility
Like most Nikon DSLRs, the D5 automatically corrects for any lateral color
fringes in any lens, and for just about all Nikon lenses introduced in the past
20 years (any AF-D, AF-I, AF-S or G lens), also can automatically correct for
lens distortion and corner light falloff. While it won't correct distortion with
Nikon AI and AI-s manual focus lenses, it does provide full color Matrix
metering, EXIF data and auto and manual exposure. Got a set of Nikon
lenses from 39 years ago? You're already good to go with the D5; they'll
look great.
The D5 works perfectly with every AF lens made since 1987, which means
AF, AF-I, AF- and AF-S; G, E and D.
It also works great with AI and AI-S manual-focus lenses, and if you update
the really old ones to AI, all Nikon's SLR lenses from as far back as 1959 work
just fine with color matrix metering and manual and aperture-priority auto
exposure and full EXIF data.
It doesn't work with Pronea (IX-NIKKOR), lenses for the ancient F3AF or with
non-AI lenses, none of which fit properly.
The electronic rangefinder works with lenses as slow as f/5.6. There are also
9 selectable focus points that will work with lenses as slow as f/8.
Specifications
Top Sample Images Intro Lens Compatibility
Frame Rates
CH (Continuous High): 12 FPS with full AF and AE. (14 FPS with mirror
locked-up in a laboratory with no metering or focussing.
Frame Buffer
Autofocus
55 selectable points.
Of these selectable 55; 35 are cross-type sensors and only 9 work at f/8.
153 AF points hidden under the hood, but you can't select all these manually;
you only can select 55 of them.
Only 99 of these hidden sensors are cross-type.
Sensor
Ultrasonic cleaner.
Image Sizes
FX (24 x 36mm)
DX (16 x 24mm)
FX cropped to 16:9 (5,568 x 3,128 (L), 4,176 x 2,344 (M) or 2,784 x 1,560 (S))
when shooting 1080 or 720 video.
DX cropped to 16:9 (3,648 x 2,048 (L), 2,736 x 1,536 (M) or 1,824 x 1,024 (S))
when shooting 1080 or 720 video.
ISO
ISO 100 to 102,400, expandable from ISO 50 ("LO -1") to ISO 3,276,800 ("HI
+ 5").
Auto ISO
White Balance
Auto (3 types).
Incandescent.
Fluorescent (7 types).
Direct sunlight.
Flash.
Cloudy.
Shade.
Preset manual.
6 stored presets.
HDR
Yes, in camera.
Color Spaces
File Formats
JPG: Fine (approx. 1:4), Normal (approx. 1:8) or Basic (approx. 1:16)
compression. Usual optimal quality or fixed size options.
RAW+JPG
RGB TIFF
You can select high or normal quality at all these, except only normal at 4K.
H.264/MPEG-4
.MOV
Audio
Finder
100% coverage. (only 97% in DX and 1.2x crop; only 97% horizontal in 4:5
crop.)
17mm eyepoint.
-3 to +1 diopters.
Shutter
10-pin Nikon remote terminal for things like the optional WR-R10 wireless
flash controller, which requires the WR-A10 adapter to attach.
Flash
Flash Sync
Flash Control
Nikon's usual i-TTL, as well as Creative Lighting System (CLS) and new
Advanced Wireless Lighting (AWL).
No native internal remote control ability; have to use a flash on-camera for
optical wireless control or an external WR-R10 and WR-A10 adapter to
connect the WR-R10 to the D5 for radio control.
Compatible Flashes
Radio
Only the SB-5000 can be fired via radio, and then only if you buy a WR-
R10 and WR-A10 adapter to control it from the D5.
Optical Wireless
For the usual on-camera TTL use, any CLS compatible flash is fine, which is
the SB-5000, SB-910, SB-900, SB-800, SB-700, SB-600, SB-500, SB-
400, SB-300 or SB-R200.
Older flashes will fire, but you'll lose TTL (through-the-lens) exposure control
and won't even get an in-finder ready light. Older flashes like the SB-28 or SB-
20 work fine in their non-TTL auto modes which use a sensor on the flash
itself. Simpler flashes like the SB-23 that have no on-flash auto mode will only
work manually.
Light Meter
TTL RGB.
180k pixels.
3D Color Matrix.
4mm spot at the selected focus point (only the center point with old manual-
focus AI lenses).
Meter Range
LV -3 ~ +20.
LCD Monitor
Touch sensitive.
Storage
CF card version: Two slots for the usual Type 1 UDMA 7 CF cards. The slots
are too thin for the old microdrives.
Both have the usual options for the two cards: dual (backup), sequential
(overflow) or RAW/JPG.
Connectors
Connectors, Nikon D5. bigger.
Type C HDMI.
10-pin Nikon remote: for things like optional WR-R10 (requires WR-A10
adapter) or WR-1 Wireless Remote Controller, GP-1/GP-1A GPS Unit, or
GPS device compliant with NMEA0183 version 2.01 or 3.01 (requires optional
MC-35 GPS Adapter Cord and cable with D-sub nine-pin connector)
Ethernet
400MBps maximum
RJ45.
Power
Nikon EN-EL18a battery. bigger.
Bottom, Nikon EN-EL18a battery. bigger.
Rated 3,780 shots, CIPA (23°C/73.4°F (±2 °C/3.6 °F) with an AF-S NIKKOR
24– 70mm f/2.8E ED VR, focussed from infinity to minimum range and one
photograph taken at default settings once every 30s. Live view not used.)
or
or
Size
Weight
CF card version
49.667 oz. (1,408.1 g. or 3 lbs., 1.667 oz.) with battery and two CF cards,
actual measured.
Rated 49.9 oz. (1,415 g. or 3 lbs., 1.9 oz.) with battery and two CF cards.
49.6 oz. (1,405 g. or 3 lbs., 1.6 oz.) with battery and two XQD cards.
Included
Camera
AN-DC15 Strap
Quality
The battery, charger, strap, USB cable and almost everything else is from
China.
Environment, operating
0 to 40°C (32 to 104°F).
Announced
Promised for
March 2016.
Price, USA
Canon and Nikon, the top DSLR makers, are constantly pushing the envelope with models designed to keep
their pro shooters happy, such as Canon’s EOS 1D X Mark II and Nikon’s D5. Honestly, there are very few
enthusiasts who would or could drop $6,000 just for a full-frame camera body, but it’s always good to test the
bleeding edge tech as key new features will trickle down to more affordable cameras in the near future. In
keeping with that philosophy, we were more than happy to give the new D5 after testing its APS-C sibling, the
D500.
After hitting the gym to get in shape – the D5 weighs in at over three pounds, and that’s without a lens – we
took Nikon’s new top-of-the-line DSLR to see what $6,500 will buy you.
As Nikon’s highest-end camera, the D5 is often referred to as a flagship. We think “aircraft carrier” is a more apt
description. The D5 is huge, measuring 6.3 x 6.3 x 3.7 inches. That makes room for the integrated vertical grip,
dual XQD or CompactFlash card slots (more on this later), and massive battery that provides for 3,780
exposures (based on CIPA testing). Add lenses like the 24-70mm f/2.8 and 70-200mm f/2.8 zooms and you
better be in shape before lugging this gear around.
At 3.11 pounds, the D5 is actually a bit lighter than Canon’s 1D X Mark II at 3.37 pounds, but it still takes a toll
on your body after a day of shooting. While some intrepid photojournalists will undoubtedly carry a D5 kit on
assignment, you are more likely to find this camera atop a monopod or tripod on the sidelines of a major
sporting event or in a professional studio.
For anyone who hasn’t used this style of DSLR before, the massive, all-black Nikon looks formidable. But once
you get past the first impression, it’s still a DSLR, one that’s nicely set up with all the important controls at the
ready. Needless to say, you can pick it up and start shooting like any digital camera, but its capabilities go far
beyond that, so a walk through the owner’s manual makes sense.
One of the most outstanding features of the D5 is the 153-point autofocus system.
One of the most outstanding features of the D5 is its 153-point autofocus system, up from 51 in the D4S. Of
those points, 99 are cross-type, being sensitive to both vertical and horizontal lines, which should improve
focusing speed on a variety of subjects. No other non-Nikon DSLR comes close to this. It’s so accurate that
basically anything you frame will be captured sharply and crisply. To get an idea of what this system can do,
check out our review of the $2,000 Nikon D500 – our pick for best camera of 2016 – which uses the same AF
system.
The D5 serves up a healthy amount of options when it comes to choosing AF modes. From single-point, single-
shot AF to advanced continuous AF with 3D tracking, the camera can be fine-tuned for everything from still-life
shots to high-speed sports photography. We were happy shooting in the 153-point Group AF setting and left it
in that position throughout most of our testing.
The control layout will be familiar to users of Nikon’s previous single-digit D cameras, but some things have
changed. The control cluster on the top left now houses the Mode, Bracket, and Metering keys. The dial
immediately below lets you change shooting mode and is where you’ll find Continuous High (CH) mode to
unlock the maximum 12 frames per second (FPS) burst shooting. Near the shutter button on the right are
controls for movie recording, exposure compensation, and ISO (which has been moved to that position to make
it easier to access while looking through the viewfinder). Like the D4S, the controls on the back of the camera
can be illuminated for easy visibility at night or in low-light settings.