First full review of Nikon D300

The first full review of the Nikon D300 is online:

D300 review by CameraLabs

Bjørn Rørslett: what the D3 is and what not

The highly respected Bjørn Rørslett has posted an answer to a blog entry by Lloyd Chambers:

I’m having trouble making acceptable photos with the D3, everything  seems soft and just not ‘there’ ”
(Source)

The answer:

The first D3 advantage obviously is a vastly improved noise performance, the second that the combination lens + camera can achieve higher image contrast thus imparting a better sharpness for the “big details” that give the overall impression of sharpness of the image, the third (deriving from the second) is that the files stand much better enlargement. The almost total lack of CA and the even illumination of [some, not all] wide-angle lenses might result from the sensor design or the EXPEED processor, or both.

Now, to the drawbacks. It is clear that with high-performance lenses, D3 might have insuffcient resolution due to its lower pixel density. Whether or not this is an issue will depend on the subject and scene contrast, and also the processing of the file done in-camera. Shooting people with D3 should yield remarkable image quality, landscape shouldn’t.”
Read his full answer at the NikonGear forum.

D3 and 600/4 and a teleconverter…

Joshua Buck, a photojournalist at a newspaper in Colorado, mentions that the D3 is even usable for him with a 600mm f/4 and a 1.4x teleconverter at ISO 5000:

There is nothing like shooting with a night game with a 600mm f/4 and a 1.4x teleconverter at ISO 5000! What an amazing camera”

Nikon D3: A portrait at ISO 10000

I have found a nice portrait made at ISO 10000 with the D3. It shows how good the performance at high ISO actually is – pretty amazing!

Michael Webers Nikon D3 review

Michael Weber has posted his Nikon D3 review. According to him the D3 has a slight DR advantage over the Canon 1DIII and the new autofocus is very accurate. Some quotes:

Image quality especially at high ISOs above 1600 will set new standards

Literally shocked were some of them (his Canon collegues) when they had a look at my sequences take with the innovative scene recognition system at 9 fps. No matter where the player’s movements were constant or jerky, whether the background was disturbing or very contrasty, or players in the front passed through the scene, the newly designed AF tracking was mostly spot on and very, very accurate.”