Nikon D3100

Nikon D3100[1]

Nikon D3100 with the Nikon 18-55mm zoom lens.
Type Digital single-lens reflex
Sensor 23.1 mm × 15.4 mm Nikon DX format RGB CMOS sensor, 1.5 × FOV crop, 4.94µm pixel size
Maximum resolution 4,608 × 3,072 (14.2 effective megapixels)
Recording medium Secure Digital, SDHC and SDXC compatible
Lens Interchangeable, Nikon F-mount
Flash Built in Pop-up, Guide number 13m at ISO 100, Standard ISO hotshoe, Compatible with the Nikon Creative Lighting System
Shutter Electronically-controlled vertical-travel focal-plane shutter
Shutter speed range 30 s to 1/4000 s in 1/2 or 1/3 stops and Bulb, 1/200 s X-sync
ASA/ISO range 100–3200 in 1/3 EV steps, up to 12800 as boost
Exposure metering TTL 3D Color Matrix Metering II metering with a 420 pixel RGB sensor
Exposure modes Auto modes (auto, auto [flash off]), Guide Mode, Advanced Scene Modes (Portrait, Landscape, Sports, Close-up, Night Portrait), programmed auto with flexible program (P), shutter-priority auto (S), aperture-priority auto (A), manual (M), (Q) quiet mode.
Metering modes 3D Color Matrix Metering II, Center-weighted and Spot
Focus areas 11-area AF system, Multi-CAM 1000 AF Sensor Module
Focus modes AF-A (Auto-servo AF); AF-S (Single-servo AF); AF-C (Continuous-servo AF); MF (Manual focus).[2]
Continuous shooting 3 frame/s
Viewfinder Optical 0.80x, 95% Pentamirror
Flash bracketing 2 or 3 frames in steps of 1/3, 1/2, 2/3, 1 or 2 EV
Custom WB Auto, Incandescent, Fluorescent, Sunlight, Flash, Cloudy, Shade, Preset
Rear LCD monitor 3.0-inch 230,000 pixel TFT-LCD
Battery Nikon EN-EL14 rechargeable Lithium-Ion battery
Weight Approx. 455 g (1.003 lb) without battery, memory card or body cap
Made in  Thailand

The Nikon D3100 is a 14.2-megapixel DX format DSLR Nikon F-mount camera announced by Nikon on August 19, 2010. It replaced the D3000 as Nikon's entry level DSLR. It introduced Nikon's new EXPEED 2 image processor and was the first Nikon DSLR featuring full high-definition video recording with full-time autofocus and H.264 compression, instead of Motion JPEG compression. It was also the first Nikon DSLR to provide high-definition video recording at more than one frame rate.[3]

Use is assisted by two Guide Modes: Easy Operation and Advanced Operation tutorial. On April 19, 2012, the D3200 superseded the D3100 as Nikon's entry-level DSLR.[4]

Features

Like Nikon's other consumer-level DSLRs, the D3100 has no in-body autofocus motor, and fully automatic autofocus requires one of the currently 162 lenses with an integrated autofocus-motor.[5] With any other lens, the camera's electronic rangefinder can be used to manually adjust focus.[6][7]

Can mount unmodified A-lenses (also called Non-AI, Pre-AI or F-type) with support of the electronic rangefinder and without metering.[8]

Optional accessories

The Nikon D3100 has available accessories such as:[9]

Third party radio (wireless) flash control triggers[23] are partly supporting i-TTL,[24][25] but do not support the Nikon Creative Lighting System (CLS).[26][27] See reviews.[28][29]

Reception

The D3100 has received many independent reviews[30][31] and image comparisons at all ISO speeds.[32]

The D3100 is the only known Nikon DSLR with an image sensor interface[33] integrating analog-to-digital converters not made by Nikon: The result is a dynamic range only at the level of competitors like the (higher priced) Canon EOS 600D;[34] lower than other current Nikon DSLRs.

See also

References

  1. "Nikon D3100". Digital SLR Cameras products line-up. Nikon Corporation.
  2. Winans, Moose. "Nikon D3100 Focus Modes and Focus Points", CameraTips.com. Retrieved on August 16, 2013.
  3. Laing, Gordon (November 2010). "Nikon D3100 Movie Mode". Nikon D3100 Review. CameraLabs.com. Retrieved February 6, 2012. Previous Nikon DSLRs offered a best quality movie mode of 720p at 24fps, but now the D3100 offers the same resolution at the choice of 24, 25 or 30fps, while crucially adding a new Full HD 1080p mode at 24fps.
  4. "Nikon updates entry-level DSLR with 24MP D3200 and optional WiFi". Digital Photography Review. April 2012. Retrieved June 15, 2012.
  5. "Specifications – Nikon D3100". Nikon Corporation. Retrieved 2010-08-19.
  6. "Nikon D3000 Lens Compatibility". Nikon Corporation. Retrieved 2009-10-26.
  7. Nikon D60 electronic rangefinder. Digital Photography Review. Retrieved on 7 September 2012.
  8. John White's AI conversions for Nikon lenses Aiconversions
  9. "D3100 accessories". Nikon USA. Retrieved 2011-08-08.
  10. Solmeta Geotaggers Solmeta
  11. Dawn di-GPS Products Dawn
  12. EasyTag GPS and Wireless Bluetooth Modules Easytag
  13. Foolography Unleashed Bluetooth Geotagging Foolography
  14. Gisteq PhotoTrackr Plus for Nikon DSLR (Bluetooth) Gisteq
  15. Phottix Geo One GPS Phottix
  16. Nikon DSLR GPS Smack Down Results Terrywhite
  17. Review: Geotagging with Easytag GPS module (Nikon GP-1 compatible) Trick77
  18. Review: blueSLR Wireless Camera Control & GPS Geotagging Terrywhite
  19. Battery Packs Phottix
  20. Product search: Nikon D3100 Battery grip Google
  21. Eye-Fi Wi-Fi network: how it works Eye-fi
  22. Flash Units Compatible with Nikon's CLS including Wireless Master Dpanswers
  23. Radio Triggers for Flash and Camera Dpanswers
  24. Knight For Nikon Flashgun I-TTL Trigger Pixel
  25. Radio Transmitters, Receivers and Accessories Pocketwizard
  26. The Nikon Creative Lighting System: Wireless, Remote, Through-the-Lens Metered (iTTL) Flash! Imaging Resource
  27. Guide to Nikon TTL Flashes photo.net
  28. Pixel Knight TR-331 and TR-332 TTL Radio Triggers Dpanswers
  29. Pixel Knight TR-331 Review Part III Inside the Viewfinder
  30. Digitalcameratracker: Nikon D3100 reviews, ratings, sample photos Digitalcameratracker
  31. "Nikon D3100". Digital Camera Views.
  32. Imaging Resource Comparometer (needs Javascript enabled)
  33. Nikon Hacker: Camera Matrix
  34. Dxomark: Nikon D3200 and others: Compare cameras side by side

External links

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