MouthShut.com Would Like to Send You Push Notifications. Notification may includes alerts, activities & updates.

OTP Verification

Enter 4-digit code
For Business
MouthShut Logo
Upload Photo

MouthShut Score

87%
3.79 

Ease of use:

Durability:

Features:

Battery life:

Picture Quality:

Nikon

×

Upload your product photo

Supported file formats : jpg, png, and jpeg

Address



Contact Number

Cancel

I feel this review is:

Fake
Genuine

To justify genuineness of your review kindly attach purchase proof
No File Selected

Review of Nikon D60
May 30, 2016 08:28 AM 2830 Views

Picture Quality:

Ease of use:

Value for Money:

Shutter Speed:

Battery life:

The D60 is the third incarnation of Nikon's compact, user-friendly entry-level SLR line that started back in 2006 with the D40(which replaced the first Nikon'starter' model, the D50). The original D40 was a hugely important camera for Nikon and can be given a lot of the credit for the resurgence in Nikon's fortunes at the volume end of the SLR market(which had been totally dominated by Canon since the launch of the EOS 300D / Digital Rebel).


The D40's success(which continued long after the D40X made its swift appearance only 6 months later) isn't hard to explain; it was keenly priced, nicely designed and built and capable of excellent results. It was also a camera that proved cameras do not sell on megapixels alone(even at launch its 6MP resolution was far from'class leading').


The D40X, which was positioned as a premium alternative to the D40 rather than its replacement, didn't mess around with the formula much at all; a new sensor with more(ten) megapixels and a lower base ISO, plus a slightly higher continuous shooting rate. The D60 is a direct replacement for the D40X(the D40 will stay around for a while as Nikon's budget option), and once again it's not a major upgrade; the sensor remains the same(though now has a dust reduction system) and the external design is almost identical.


There's a few new features, including the same Expeed processing'concept' seen in the D3 / D300, Active D-Lighting, an eye sensor(to control the screen display), and some tweaks to the interface, but perhaps the most significant change isn't to the camera at all; the move to an optically stabilized version of the kit lens


Upload Photo

Upload Photos


Upload photo files with .jpg, .png and .gif extensions. Image size per photo cannot exceed 10 MB


Comment on this review

Read All Reviews

YOUR RATING ON

Nikon D60
1
2
3
4
5
X