Refurbished D7100

C. Hand

Senior Member
I just received my new D7100 with my Nikon 55-200M lens. It is in perfect conditions with 1,100 actuation's :(. I was hoping for less, but Oh well that does not remove my excitement for this camera. I took a leap of faith by selling my Nikon L380 and returning to full photography after 25 years of point and shoots. I have a huge amount to learn and re-learn, but I snapped a couple of pictures before it got wrapped and put under the tree the image quality of those pictures was phenomenal!:rolleyes:
 

Bill16

Senior Member
A thousand actuations or so is nothing but a drop in a bucket with Nikon DSLRs! It has a shutter life expectancy of 150,000 actuations and from what I have noticed most people don't use that up before upgrading! Lol Yes that especially includes me in that observation! Lol :)
So you have a practically brand new DSLR, and a very very long shutter life predicted for it!:)


I hope you'll have a blast with your new D7100! :D
 

cwgrizz

Senior Member
Challenge Team
It has a shutter life expectancy of 150,000 actuations and from what I have noticed most people don't use that up before upgrading! Lol Yes that especially includes me in that observation! Lol :)

But Bill, most people don't have enough cameras to shoot a different one each day for the year. ;) Heck you could probably do the 365 and never use the same camera twice. :cheerful:
 

cwgrizz

Senior Member
Challenge Team
[MENTION=41207]C. Hand[/MENTION] I know you will enjoy the new camera. Having just received one myself, I am having fun trying to get a handle on all of the features.
 

Bill16

Senior Member
Lol I wish! Lol I only have two DSLRs! A D700 and my pride and joy the D800E! :p

But Bill, most people don't have enough cameras to shoot a different one each day for the year. ;) Heck you could probably do the 365 and never use the same camera twice. :cheerful:
 
First off, Welcome to the forum. We have a great group here and many of us shoot with the D7100. It is a great camera and you will enjoy it. There is a large learning curve for this camera so ask a lot of questions. One of the first things you need to do is to study up on "Fine Tuning" of all your lenses. Not an easy task but it could make a big difference in the quality/sharpness of your shots.
 

C. Hand

Senior Member
Thanks everyone, I am sure I will have a lot of questions! I am super excited to get started!


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