New camera

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Location
Norfolk
Sorry if there is thread on this but I did search ...

Last year I was given a nikon d3000, never been into photography but I've found I like it, so looking to upgrade and I think I've settled on the nikon d7500, it has Bluetooth, WiFi and and a lcd screen viewfinder which I think are all beneficial, and I believe my existing lenses will be compatible. Does anyone have any views on the d7500 or any other recommendations?
 

Oldhippy

Cynical idealist
I don't know much about cameras but enjoy photography a lot. Generally everything has my bike in the photo and I am looking to get a good bridge camera for travelling about.
 

wafter

I like steel bikes and I cannot lie..
Location
Oxford
The obvious question in my head is whether you actually need to upgrade.

I'd consider a new camera if I needed tangible technical improvments (high ISO image quality, frame rate etc) but tbh I'd not consider much of what you list as an incentive; however of course this is somewhat subjective.
 

Jameshow

Veteran
I don't know much about cameras but enjoy photography a lot. Generally everything has my bike in the photo and I am looking to get a good bridge camera for travelling about.

What were you looking at.

I've been looking at Lumix fz series 38/48 probably?
 
The Nikon D7500 is DX/ APS-C sensor size and has a focus calibration feature, the one thing lacking on my D5300.
Will you take better photos? You may take sharper ones if your current cameras calibration is off.
The Nikon DX format is not well supported by Nikon and the range of new DX lenses is limitted but you can use bigger FX lenses and older F lenses with certain caveats. I dont think the new Z lenses will fit DX.

I am generally happy with my old D5300, it does everything I need and more , with the exception of focus calibration to a specific lens. The 7500 is tougher and weather sealed but also heavier.
 
I don't know much about cameras but enjoy photography a lot. Generally everything has my bike in the photo and I am looking to get a good bridge camera for travelling about.

I've just bought a used Fujifilm Finepix in excellent condition for £45 from ebay. More than acceptable for my standard of photography without the need to lug all the DSLR kit around.

And it has a viewfinder, a huge plus IMO.
 

Electric_Andy

Heavy Metal Fan
Location
Plymouth
I don't know your level of expertise so sorry if I'm insulting you; just adding my 2 cents worth. I had a Canon [can't remember model] DSLR
3 years ago which I bought used for £125. It took great photos, I had the standard lens and bought a 16-400mm zoom lense. I ended up getting rid of it because it was so big to cart around. I then bought a Panasonic DMC-TZ70 for about the same price. It is far smaller, but has every ounce of zoom that my long range had, plus better stabilisation. Also has bluetooth so you can send photos straight to your phone. Has enough adjustment and settings as I'd want to use - but I pretty much stick to simple mode. My phone (which I always have on me) does very good panoramic shots if I don't have my camera on me.

I could have kept the Canon DSLR and, had I taken the time to learn about all of the settings, then could have got even better pictures. But I'd hazard a guess and say, unless you are a pro, any camera has the tools for the perfect shot so upgrading to a slightly newer/better one is not going to make a great deal of difference unless you are already pushing its boundaries. I would possibly upgrade for a bigger screen and/or Bluetooth, but then again I always used the view finder and it was no real hardship plugging the thing into a PC anyway
 
I don't know your level of expertise so sorry if I'm insulting you; just adding my 2 cents worth. I had a Canon [can't remember model] DSLR
3 years ago which I bought used for £125. It took great photos, I had the standard lens and bought a 16-400mm zoom lense. I ended up getting rid of it because it was so big to cart around. I then bought a Panasonic DMC-TZ70 for about the same price. It is far smaller, but has every ounce of zoom that my long range had, plus better stabilisation. Also has bluetooth so you can send photos straight to your phone. Has enough adjustment and settings as I'd want to use - but I pretty much stick to simple mode. My phone (which I always have on me) does very good panoramic shots if I don't have my camera on me.

I could have kept the Canon DSLR and, had I taken the time to learn about all of the settings, then could have got even better pictures. But I'd hazard a guess and say, unless you are a pro, any camera has the tools for the perfect shot so upgrading to a slightly newer/better one is not going to make a great deal of difference unless you are already pushing its boundaries. I would possibly upgrade for a bigger screen and/or Bluetooth, but then again I always used the view finder and it was no real hardship plugging the thing into a PC anyway

The wireless features of Nikon are really clunky.
 

Pblakeney

Well-Known Member
Tbh, you probably won’t notice any improvements with the upgrade, and this goes for most bodies unless investing a large amount.
Your money will be much better spent on improving you lenses. Experiment with what you have. Want wider? Want longer? Want shallower depth field?
Those lenses can then still be used should you upgrade the body later.
 

Bristolian

Über Member
Location
Bristol, UK
Sorry if there is thread on this but I did search ...

Last year I was given a nikon d3000, never been into photography but I've found I like it, so looking to upgrade and I think I've settled on the nikon d7500, it has Bluetooth, WiFi and and a lcd screen viewfinder which I think are all beneficial, and I believe my existing lenses will be compatible. Does anyone have any views on the d7500 or any other recommendations?

The D7500 is an extremely capable camera - the APC version of the FF D850. Yes, any lens that you have for the D3000 will work on the D7500.

Depending on what you are photographing you might also consider the D500, which is the defacto choice for wildlife or motorsports. This is also an APC camera and your existing lenses will work with it.
 

Bristolian

Über Member
Location
Bristol, UK
Tbh, you probably won’t notice any improvements with the upgrade, and this goes for most bodies unless investing a large amount.
Your money will be much better spent on improving you lenses. Experiment with what you have. Want wider? Want longer? Want shallower depth field?
Those lenses can then still be used should you upgrade the body later.

Not so in this case, the D7500 is a huge leap from the D3000 in terms of functionality, having discreet controls instead of having to make changes in a menu, processing power and much better low-light performance.

I have owned (and used) both and no matter how good a lens you put on the D3000 it is still a D3000 with all its faults and foibles.
 

mustang1

Legendary Member
Location
London, UK
I have the predecessor, D7000. I also have a D5000.

The 7000 is excellent; it has very easy access to all the main controls so instead of going into menus to change iso, shutter speed etc, it's sound with real buttons which give direct and very quick access to the settings.

It's got excellent body construction, dial memory ports and a bunch of useful stuff. Hint: it's not all about specification, a lot has to do with how it"feels".

I was thinking of a full frame camera back in those days but they are rather large. I'm more recent times I was thinking of getting a micro for Thurs but I really dislike the sound it makes when taking a photo (like it's about to break).

But anyway, that was years ago; idk what the D7500 is like compared to newer cameras.

Hint: get yourself a prime lens. You're going to think it's a waste of money because you cannot zoom but it's one of those less-is-more scenarios. Consider it it be an SSFG bike!
 
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