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Nikon D60 SLR Review


Features & Controls
Nikon-F Mount Lenses
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Here's a close-up of the all-metal Nikon-F lens mount. On the upper left is the focus-assist illuminator lamp,
also used for red-eye reduction flash mode, and on the right side is the lens release lock
button.
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The D60 does not have a focus mode selector switch on the body, it's on the lens
of the newer AF-S or AF-I CPU type lenses. The D60
employs a 3-area TTL phase detection AF system using Nikon's Multi-CAM530 module with an AF-
assist illuminator for low-light situations.
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The AF-S DX Nikkor 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6G VG lens is compatible with all Nikon D-series digital SLRs. With
an equivalent coverage of 27-202.5mm in 35mm photography, it employs Nikon's Silent Wave motor (AF-S) for
fast and quiet autofocus, Extra-Low Dispersion glass (ED) for minimized chromatic aberrations, and
Nikon's proprietary Vibration Reduction (VR) technology, that allows you to take pictures at
shutter speeds up to three stops slower than possible without the VR. It also incorporates a reliable metal lens mount for
years of durability.
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The AF-S DX VR Zoom-Nikkor 55-200mm f/4-5.6G IF-ED is another new lens for Nikon D-series digital SLRs. With
an equivalent coverage of 82-300mm in 35mm photography, it employs Nikon's enhanced Vibration Reduction (VR)
technology for steady shots as well as Silent Wave motor (AF-S) for fast and quiet autofocus, Extra-
Low Dispersion glass (ED) for minimized chromatic aberrations, and Internal Focusing (IF) for convenient and
balanced handling. Other features include a reliable metal lens mount for years of durability and a M/A
mode for seamless switching between autofocus and manual modes.
![]() Designed exclusively for use with Nikon digital SLR cameras, DX Nikkor lenses deliver a versatile range of angle-of-view, higher performance, and outstanding center-to-edge-to-corner image quality, while realizing smaller and lighter designs. The current lineup of DX Nikkor lenses includes:
When used with a Nikon digital SLR camera and optional Nikon Capture NX software, images shot with
the AF DX Fisheye-Nikkor 10.5mm lens can be transformed into ultra-wide angle rectilinear
images with a choice of 100° and 130° horizontal angles of view.
i-TTL Flash![]() The built-in speedlight automatically pops up and fires when natural lighting is inadequate or to add balanced fill-flash when there is strong backlighting (Auto and Digital Vari-Program modes only). Nikon i-TTL technology improves the accuracy of fill-flash exposure and white balance by seamlessly integrating color information from the speedlight's monitor pre-flash with information from the 420-pixel RGB sensor. This has been improved to provide coverage for up to 18mm wide angle lenses. You can shoot at synchronized speeds up to 1/200 second.
The built-in flash has a Guide Number of 13/43 (ISO 100, m/ft., 20° C/68° F)
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![]() The "hot shoe" allows the use of SB-series Speedlights (like the SB-600 shown here mounted on the D40x) without a sync cable. It includes a safety lock for units with a locking pin, such as the SB-600 and SB-800. When used with compatible flash units or SB-R200 wireless remote Speedlight, the D60 supports the advanced Nikon Creative Lighting System (CLS), including i-TTL flash control and Flash Color Information Communication. The SU-800 wireless Speedlight commander can also be used to control remote SB-800, 600 or R200 flash units.
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The D60 controls the SB-600 or SB-800's motorized zoom head and makes use of its more
powerful AF-assist beam. The output of the flash is controlled precisely thanks to the
i-TTL flash exposure control system. And nothing beats the natural look of
bounce flash.
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The D60 does not have a PC sync port so you need to use the optional Nikon AS-15 Sync Terminal
Adapter to connect to external studio flash units (shown here mounted on the D100.) It slides on the flash hot shoe and gives you a standard PC sync
connector. Note that the AS-15 does not contain an isolation circuit so be careful of strobes that use high
trigger voltages.
Viewfinder![]() The eye-level penta-Dach Mirror type viewfinder shows approximately 95% of the captured frame. It has dioptric adjustment (-1.7 to +0.5m-1) and a comfortable 18mm (-1.0m-1) eye relief with a fairly wide viewing angle. It employs a fixed Type B BriteView Clear Matte screen Mark V with superimposed focus brackets.
The D60 viewfinder display:
1 - Focus brackets (focus areas) ![]()
2 - Focus indicator
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