Nikon’s D40; “Mini” D-SLR At An Affordable Price:
Page 2
As this might be viewed as a step-up camera that might be used by families to
document their lives we were eager to try out the camera in Continuous mode
with a fairly high (400 and above) ISO to push up shutter speed and preclude
the need for flash (or as we call it “Kid” mode). The D40 performed
admirably, with no shutter lag at all and with right-on exposures using the
3D Color Matrix II pattern. We even tried the various Vari-Program (Scene) modes,
something we usually avoid, but they are quite apt for this camera and its potential
buyers. They worked just fine, including Night Portrait mode, though we would
suggest a tripod or steadying device for this selection. The supplied 18-55mm
f/3.5-5.6 lens gets quite slow at the 55mm end, so keeping the ISO at 400 for
all but bright outdoors shots is recommended.
Low Light/Flash |
|
The
built-in flash may not be too powerful, but it seems perfect for
many family photographs, such as Kallie opening presents on Christmas
morning. To get this mix of ambient and flash exposure, the D40
was set on Shutter Priority mode at 1¼60 sec exposure at
an ISO of 800. The balance of mixed light was just right, shown
by the warm glow of the lamp in the background and the even light
in the foreground.
© 2007, Grace Schaub, All Rights Reserved |
|
In all, the D40 is not a prime camera or even a second back-up body for an
avid amateur. But Nikon, in the D40’s design and marketing, makes it clear
that this is not the aim or intent of this camera; their D80 is clearly the
choice for that role. The D40 is Nikon’s family D-SLR, the one that the
company hopes will bring many more people into their D-SLR tent. As a step-up
camera, and one that allows users to explore more creative aspects of photography,
it does admirably.
It could be argued that the D40 might just sound the death knell for quite a
few non-D-SLRs. It allows for lens interchangeability, offers plenty of auto
and user-controlled image effect options, and completely eliminates what is
probably killing more digicam sales than anything else these days—that
dreadful shutter lag. At $599, it’s still not the equivalent of the “student”
camera (the Pentax K1000 SLR of film days) we await in a digital SLR, but it
sure is getting close. And while it sports a 6-megapixel sensor (many digicams
surpass that with ease at equivalent prices) those using this class of camera
who haven’t been brainwashed by the megapixel wars will find its image
quality and print size potential does the trick.
|
You
can choose two ways to shoot in contrasty light outdoors—with
a touch of fill flash or using the D40’s Retouch menu’s
D-Lighting, a sort of shadow/highlight control. Here a touch of
fill flash was used in low light with an Aperture Priority setting
of f/13 and 1/30 sec at ISO 400. The point is that you can use this
camera on Auto for very satisfactory shots, or use the many user
controls to add a creative, personal touch when desired.
© 2007, George Schaub, All Rights Reserved |
|
SDHC Cards
Our tests with the Nikon D40 were conducted using the 4GB ATP ProMax SDHC (Class
6) card. This new format has allowed SD cards to compete in capacity with the
FAT 32 CompactFlash cards, and the new Class Speed ratings are intended to reveal
the potential download speed, given the download devices are capable of the
speed capability of the card. (Class 6 is rated as a minimum of 6MB per second
transfer rate.) The ATP card performed flawlessly and made downloading images,
even directly from the camera—usually the slowest method—speedy
and efficient.
Note that SDHC cards are not backward compatible for use in non-SDHC devices.
The Nikon D40 is of course SDHC compatible; all SD card compatible cameras from
this point forward should be able to take the higher-capacity cards, but always
be sure to check before you load one into a camera or other device. Note that
standard SD cards are useable in the D40 and other new SDHC compatible devices.
For more information, contact Nikon Inc., 1300 Walt Whitman Rd., Melville, NY
11747; (800) 526-4566, (631) 547-4200; www.nikonusa.com.
For a full list of Technical Specifications, visit the Instant Links section
of our website at: www.shutterbug.com/currentissuelinks/.