2009-07-22
The Nikon D5000, plus a new 10-24mm lens
Nikon announced a new consumer-grade digital SLR this morning: the D5000. Contrary to expectations, this is not a replacement for the D40; instead, it sits squarely between the D60 (which, with the discontinuation of the D40, now becomes Nikons low-end SLR) and the D90. The D5000 appears to be a lot like the D90: same 12-megapixel sensor, 11-point autofocus and HD movie capacity, as well as compatibility with the GP-1 GPS unit and the MC-DC2 remote (I knew they wouldnt have released those for just one camera). On the other hand, its a lot like a D40 or D60: no top LCD, no second dial, no ability to autofocus AF lenses, no commander mode for the built-in flash, no ability to use an external battery grip. And then theres the D5000s swivelling rear LCD, which no other Nikon DSLR has. The D5000 is considerably more expensive than the D60: when both are bundled with the 18-55mm VR lens, the D5000s Canadian MSRP is $430 more than the D60s. On the other hand, its a lot closer to the D90s price point: the D5000 with the 18-55mm VR lens is $220 less than a similarly equipped D90; that gap drops to $200 when both are bundled with the 18-105mm VR lens. I wonder how many buyers wont opt for a D60 (to save money) or a D90 (to add features) instead. Early previews: Digital Photography Review, PhotographyBLOG. Meanwhile, Nikon also announced a new wide-angle lens for DX cameras: the AF-S DX Nikkor 10-24mm f/3.5-4.5G ED goes a little wider than my 12-24mm f/4 lens, and is slightly cheaper (by $80 according to the Canadian MSRPs). Its equivalent to a 15-36mm lens on a full-frame camera, and is probably the widest zoom were ever going to get on a DX camera.
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