Which Nikon DSLRs have lossless raw or uncompressed raw?

J-see

Senior Member
You'd have to do effort to offend me and I'm as English as you are so if it is about nuances, don't gamble it's my forte ;)

They do add a feature called "High" ISO noise reduction don't they? Why call it that when "high" ISO does not add more noise?

Time's up: off the grid.
 
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skater

New member
It's really odd to me that you'd be looking at cameras that are years out of date, and then wondering whether the raw file format is lossy or not. If image quality is really that important, shouldn't you be buying the latest and greatest?
 

RON_RIP

Senior Member
" Myself when young did eagerly frequent
Doctor an Saint, and heard great argument
About it and about, but evermore
Came out the same door where in I went."
Omar Kyayyam

I just think I will stick with my D7000. Normally set the ISO at 400 and leave it there, and I am a happy camper. Just sayin
 

Ben321

New member
It's really odd to me that you'd be looking at cameras that are years out of date, and then wondering whether the raw file format is lossy or not. If image quality is really that important, shouldn't you be buying the latest and greatest?

I also am on a limited budget. This means that price is also a consideration. Sometimes an older model will have a very similar set of features to a newer model, but be cheaper because it is older, or even a used one might show up on eBay at and exceedingly low price. So I'm trying to find to find the best features for the lowest price, even if that means buying a 5 year old DSLR.
 

skater

New member
I also am on a limited budget. This means that price is also a consideration. Sometimes an older model will have a very similar set of features to a newer model, but be cheaper because it is older, or even a used one might show up on eBay at and exceedingly low price. So I'm trying to find to find the best features for the lowest price, even if that means buying a 5 year old DSLR.

The lossy compression will make a tiny difference. More important things are going to include the condition of the camera, the quality and condition of the lenses, the settings for the image, your skill, and any post-processing you decide to do. The compression isn't like a badly compressed JPG where you can see the artifacts in it. Also, if you zoom way in (known as pixel peeping) on any image from any of those cameras, you'll see slight blurring, because of the anti-alias filter - only a few newer models don't have that filter.

In short, I wouldn't even worry about lossy compression. There are so many other things that can go wrong in a picture that compression isn't even on my list.

Personally, if I were sticking with the Dxx series, I'd go with a D90. But I think you can pick up a refurb D7000 for under $500 now, and the older D3xxx and D5xxx series cameras are probably even cheaper.
 
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