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D800 Ultimate Image Quality. Full Cinematic Experience.

D800, built for today’s multimedia photographer includes a groundbreaking 36.3MP FX-format CMOS sensor, Full HD 1080p video at 30/25/24p with stereo sound, class leading ISO range of 100-6400, expandable to 25,600, 4 fps burst rate and Advanced Scene Recognition System with 91,000-pixel RGB sensor.
   
Body Only
$2,999.95*SRPSRP (Suggested Retail Price) listed only as a suggestion. Actual prices are set by dealers and are subject to change at any time.
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Supplied Accessories

  • AN-DC6 Strap
  • EN-EL15 Rechargeable Li-ion Battery
  • MH-25 Battery Charger
  • UC-E14 USB Cable
  • BM-12 LCD Monitor Cover
  • BF-1B Body Cap
  • BS-1 Accessory Shoe Cap
  • DK-17 Viewfinder Eyepiece
  • NikonView NX2 CD ROM
D800 4.6 5 67 67
Debunking all myths I recieved my D800E in time for a two-week photo trek through Peru. It was intended to be used as a back-up to my D4, but it quickly became the go-to camera for portraits and lanscape shots. The camera perfomed wonderfully under all types of conditions. Unlike all the reviews I had read, this camera can indeed be: Hand-held at slow speeds instead of only being tripod mounted. Used at high ISO speeds with incredible detail. Used for shots involving a lot of textile and colors. If moire is an issue, stop down the lens a bit more and eliminate any concerns. The lenses most often used on this camera were the 50mm f/1.4 and the 16mm - 35mm zoom. I am attaching some photos and 100% crops to show detail. All are hand-held, speeds up to 1/90th and ISO between 200 and 800. May 7, 2012
Great Results Incredible quality but with a few quirks. Going from still to video and back again is not as transparent as it could be and some of my 32GB cards don't work. But boy are the results great! July 15, 2012
Exceeds All Expectations! This is my 4th Nikon SLR, and so it was with a bit of reluctance that I purchased the d800 - thinking I would use it occasionally for landscapes and portrait work when I felt I needed the extra pixel count, but continue to use my other Nikons for everything else. Silly girl - what was I thinking? This camera exceeds all my expectations! It takes dazzling photos. The other reviewers have done an excellent job of citing the technical merits of this camera, as well as pointing out some of the drawbacks, so I won't repeat all of that. I will say that I think the price is fair for the quality and capabilities of this camera. I've heard some pros telling beginners that it doesn't matter what camera you shoot with - you need to learn the fundamentals of photography first. I agree. But I also want to encourage every photographer, no matter what your skill or experience level, to aim for the very best equipment you can afford. While a good camera can't "make" you a better photographer, it can certainly elevate your shots to their highest levels. I sincerely believe that no matter your skill level, from beginner to pro - this camera will make all your shots sing. If you're going to spend your time and talents on photography - at any level, this camera will give you the opportunity to take your very best shots. July 7, 2012
The game changing camera.... I've had the D800 for only 2 months, a short time for a rigorous evaluation but I mind was made up within seconds of downloading the first images. A lot was predicted, argued about, panned, glorified and just discussed for a long time before it because available. The predictions, for the most part were wrong. It is not a studio or tripod only super critical overly demanding camera at all.There are no downsides in having the best sensor in the industry with 36mpx. It was a very pleasant surprise that all my lenses just worked better from top pro glass to DX kit lens, all of them performed better than on anything else. Although most talk has been about the incredible detail never seen before in a DSLR before, and rightly but the revelation was discovering the complete harmony with which all the image related subsystems worked together: metering, Auto White Balance, Active D-Lighting, Auto Focus, color, 14 stops of DR etc. With little adjustment to my shooting technique my keeper rate has risen dramatically, it is hard to take a port shot that is not very well exposed, blown highlights or lost shadows. It handles mixed lighting with AWB better than any camera I have ever used including all other Nikon pro camera and Canon. After using it for a few days the most difficult aspect of the using the camera was keeping the ear to ear grin off my face. I had gotten used to taking safety shots with prior cameras, particularly if conditions were poor and doing a lot of between shot reviews so an event might need 1,200 shots in an evening or 300 on a landscape outing. No more, after a few days and my first event, I noticed i shot a fraction of frames and stopped using the rear review display. I just knew, if my composition was good, the shot was good, every time. What a confidence builder to know that critical shots will come out right the first time, with great post processing flexibility and clean detail filled shadows. I have full confidence that the D800 is the easiest to use high performance camera available, and the best image taking device I have ever seen or used. Yes, this camera is that good! July 5, 2012
SUPERGREATFANTASTIC simply an amazing camera, finally a 35mm digital slr that will impress you. Ive always been a nikon photographer, but when nikon and canon made the transition from film to digital I switched to canon, especially due to the support canon offered at almost every professional studio worldwide, the 5d Mk 2 was/is an incrediable camera, but NIkon has set the bar now with the d800. canon is out nikon is in. the timelapse option and raw processing built into the Nikon Camera menu is actually a very useful tool. July 5, 2012
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Raw File Conversion for D800

Jun 27, 2012 by
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Help Needed
Chicago
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Unable to convert D800 Raw Files to DGN. Downloaded DNG converter 7.10 and CS5 Raw 6.7 - neither program recognized the NEF files from the D800
 
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3 weeks ago
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Help Needed
Chicago
Location : 
Chicago
Age: 55-65
Favorite Subject: Travel
Nikon Family: 21+ years
Experience: Less than a month
Role: Semi-professional photographer
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Answer: 
You will need to get in contact with the third party software support for compatibility information with our products.
Jun 27, 2012 by
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2 weeks, 6 days ago
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Anonymous
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Answer: 
choose the left-most focus point and take a picture. when it turns out okay, you'll realize that not everything you read on the internet is accurate or true. my D800 was perfect right out of the box, and i've since added the new 28/1.8 lens, and i don't have focus issues, nor do i have to fine-tune my lenses or any of the other OCD behavior the chronic worriers and internet trolls go on and on about.
Jun 27, 2012 by
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Hugo First
Richmond, VA
Location : 
Richmond, VA
Age: 45-54
Favorite Subject: Nature
Nikon Family: 2-5 years
Experience: More than a year
Role: Semi-professional photographer
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2 memory cards on D800 - Why they act unusual???

Jun 28, 2012 by
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Kamy
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I bought 2 memory cards - one CF (16GB) and one SD (16GB).

I put both cards in camera. I turned on the camera and according to the manual I went to SHOOTING MENU to tell camera how to use the memory cards. These are the configuration I chose:
1. SHOOTING MENU -> Primary Slot Selection -> CF Card
2. SHOOTING MENU -> Secondary Slot Function -> Raw Primary, JPEG Secondary
3. SHOOTING MENU -> Image Quality -> Fine
4. SHOOTING MENU -> Image Size -> L
5. SHOOTING MENU -> JPEG Configuration -> Optimal Quality
6. SHOOTING MENU -> NEF (RAW) Recording -> 14Bit & Type Uncompressed

Actually I set up the memory cards in this way to store NEF/RAW files on CF Card and JPEG on SD Card ...... after configuration I SHOT .... BUT it seems it doesn't act the way I expected !!

In Playback mode while reviewing my photos I SEE "2" JEPGs one on CF card and one on SD card??!!
I think with above configuration I expect to see ONLY 1 JEPG on SD CARD??!!

Can anyone tell me if there is any possible bug in firmware??
I have updated the firmware to the latest one last week.
2 weeks, 5 days ago
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Kamy
Age: 35-44
Favorite Subject: Landscape
Nikon Family: 2-5 years
Experience: Less than a month
Role: Semi-professional photographer
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Answer: 
In order to better assist you, please click on the link below:
Answer Title: How to ask or update a Technical Support question
Answer Link: http://support.nikonusa.com/app/ans...
Jul 5, 2012 by
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D800
 
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Do I have to update the firmware?

Jul 2, 2012 by
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Anonymous
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Answer: 
http://support.nikonusa.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/17811
is the link to firmware update.
Jul 2, 2012 by
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JoeR
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194 Questions | 257 Answers
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Review

Nikon D800 Review

by Lori Grunin
March 2012
Lori Grunin posted her review of the Nikon D800 D-SLR on the CNET website, giving it a rating of 4 stars (Excellent). Grunin found the camera's dynamic range to be impressive, exposures dead-on and overall tonality in the photos beautiful. She also said the video "looks really good." Grunin said the D800 delivers excellent shooting performance. She found the camera to be "really sturdy and comfortable to shoot with." Grunin concluded by stating: "If you're a pro Nikon shooter who doesn't need the extra power of the D4 but needs the best photo quality possible at all ISO sensitivities, the D800 just became a must-have."
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Review

Nikon D800 Review

by Mario Aguilar
April 2012
Mario Aguilar posted his review of the D800 D-SLR on the Gizmodo website. Aguilar said, “The ergonomics and build of the D800 are excellent. For a professional camera, it's lightweight and compact. The textured grip is perfectly shaped to be carried one-handed.” He found the metering to be “very accurate.” He noted that the main features distinguishing it from the competition are its clean HDMI output, letting you record raw video and process it later; as well as the audio capabilities that include a stereo mic input and headphone jack. Aguilar said, “The Nikon D800 takes beautiful photos in nearly any situation.” He added, “The D800's video performance mimics its photography skills: It's a very good all-around shooter.” Aguilar concluded by saying the D800’s “fantastic image sensor takes images to a new level of quality. The high-resolution sensor was a gutsy move, and it paid off, as Nikon proved that you can pack pixels into a camera without ruining its performance in the dark.”
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Award Winner

2012 TIPA Best D-SLR Expert Level Award

The Technical Image Press Association (TIPA) presented the Nikon D800 with the 2012 TIPA Best D-SLR Expert Level Award. Noted features that prompted the honors include the amazing 36.3-million pixel count that provides an image file size rivaling the output from medium format digital backs, Full HD, and large ISO range. "For TIPA members, the camera is without a doubt the best melding of high-end demands and the needs of a practical enthusiast," stated the judges. TIPA awards are given to the best imaging products; selected by the editors of member camera and imaging magazines from around the globe.
April 2012
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Review

Nikon D800 Review

by Dan Bruns
April 2012
Dan Bruns posted his review of the D800 D-SLR on the Videomaker magazine website, touting the camera's high resolution, full frame CMOS sensor and EXPEED 3 processor. He was impressed with a number of features of the D800 including its convenient SD and CF card slots, built-in time-lapse recording, and "bevy of external buttons and controls" that are ergonomically placed on the camera. Bruns was also impressed with the camera's ability to record uncompressed video via HDMI onto an external recorder. "Doing so gives serious videographers the chance to record a much higher quality image in the format or external device they'll be editing on," he said, noting that for a camera at the D800's price point, its an "incredible feature." Additional features that Bruns liked include the manual audio controls and headphone jack. He said that "with all the features of the D800, it now makes recording audio on a DSLR a tempting prospect." Bruns concluded by saying, "With it's full 35mm sensor, myriad external buttons, solid design, uncompressed video out, and superb audio controls, the D800 is poised to be the new camera to beat in the DSLR video world."
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Review

Nikon D800 Review

by Amadou Diallo with Barney Britton and Richard Butler
May 2012
Amadou Diallo posted his review of the Nikon D800 D-SLR to the dpreview.com website, announcing that the camera has earned a dpreview Gold Award. Diallo found the D800 features outstanding high ISO performance, wide dynamic range Raw files, consistently pleasing metering and white balance, greatly improved live view, good video specs and output, excellent build and more. He said, "The D800's video spec is one of the most attractive of any currently-available DSLR." Diallo commented: "The D800 consistently delivers excellent images that don't have to be viewed at pixel level detail to be appreciated. But if you're prepared to put in the effort, your reward is a degree of resolution and detail that is very, very impressive and visibly superior to anything else on the market in this form factor." The detail offered by the camera's resolution, "ranks it among the best performers we've subjected to our studio testing," he said. "The D800 is a camera that consistently delivers high quality results, under a wide range of shooting conditions with a minimum of fuss. There's not much more you can ask for in a photographic tool than that," he concluded.
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Award Winner

Camera GP2012 Camera of the Year and Readers Awards

The Nikon D800 D-SLR has received the Camera GP2012 Camera of the Year and Camera GP2012 Readers Awards, sponsored by the Camera Press Club, Japan. The Camera of the Year is given each year to the best model released during the year. The Readers Awards are voted on by general magazine readers. The judges noted that the "Nikon D800 was selected as the Camera GP2012 Camera of the Year based on comprehensive evaluation of the camera as a whole." Noted features included the 36.3MP sensor, varied scope of advanced functions for both still and movie recording, its durable body and affordable price.
May 2012