Funny how all these issues happen with full frame cameras. It's a good time for people that are happy settling with crop sensors.
Though this means there's a chance they'll screw up the D5500 and D7200(?)
Yeah, it's surprising how long it takes some companies to adapt/change.Yep. You would think that this sort of thing would not happen after the D600, but history tends to repeat itself, though not in such a short time span. Even if someone saw the AF sensor not "sitting" right, i am not sure that anyone would be able to predict the outcome. Nikon better respond to this as fast as humanly possible or Nikon's name will be mud faster then you can say Nikon.
Yeah, it's surprising how long it takes some companies to adapt/change.
I said some, not all.Look at the issue Leica had with the sensors in their M9. I don't think i have ever seen a company react so fast. Fuji did the same with the light leak on the first batch of X-T1s. They responded very quickly and serviced the affected cameras under warranty.
That's no dark band.
That's actually quite normal and the shot as it should be would they know how to shoot below light sources. Something internal blocks that part of the haze.
Those guys with their leaks are depressing. If nowadays surviving depended upon thinking, the 21th century would be called the Age of the Great Extinction.
It's "quite normal"? I have seen many a photo shot under all sorts of light sources and i have not seen that before. Nothing internally should be blocking how the light falls on the sensor.
That's not normal light, that's flare triggered by indirect light hitting the lens outside the field of view. If that band wasn't there, the shot would still be crap. I reproduced it with the D3300 and none ever cried about light leaks or dark bands since that was released.
If you were able to reproduce it with your 3300, it does not mean it's "normal". In the article, the guy puts some black material over the AF sensor and the problem is gone. Further, as the article states, this "problem" only occurs in some D750s. It is shown in the article that on some D750s, the AF sensor is slightly higher and in others, it is more recessed. What ever you would like to call it, it is something that should not happen.