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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D7000
Today's iso performance
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<blockquote data-quote="skene" data-source="post: 586683" data-attributes="member: 13155"><p>Well if you are basing everything on iso, newer technology will always beat older technology. So what you want to consider is if the 7000 is no longer relevant as a camera, and the answer is no. The 7000 is still very much relevant despite its age, however when you are blindsided by newer tech like the 7100, 7200 and even the 500 and 5 where you see ridiculous iso gains. Now you should also put into consideration where the images are at its most usable level (this is where noise comes into play). How much noise is introduced and at what ISO?</p><p></p><p>When you start to consider what is usable and what is no longer an image, you can pit each of these cameras up against each other. Most cameras start to introduce noise above 6400 ISO, which is also where the 7000 still produces clean usable images. </p><p>So now if all cameras created equally start introducing noise at the same ISO, where else should you be looking. Camera buffering? More MPix? Burst?</p><p></p><p>Good luck with your decision.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="skene, post: 586683, member: 13155"] Well if you are basing everything on iso, newer technology will always beat older technology. So what you want to consider is if the 7000 is no longer relevant as a camera, and the answer is no. The 7000 is still very much relevant despite its age, however when you are blindsided by newer tech like the 7100, 7200 and even the 500 and 5 where you see ridiculous iso gains. Now you should also put into consideration where the images are at its most usable level (this is where noise comes into play). How much noise is introduced and at what ISO? When you start to consider what is usable and what is no longer an image, you can pit each of these cameras up against each other. Most cameras start to introduce noise above 6400 ISO, which is also where the 7000 still produces clean usable images. So now if all cameras created equally start introducing noise at the same ISO, where else should you be looking. Camera buffering? More MPix? Burst? Good luck with your decision. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D7000
Today's iso performance
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