Expensive, No built-in Wi-Fi, Big, heavy and bulky
The Nikon D810 is an incredible camera that excels in many different types of photography, including landscape, portraiture, and action — all of which lend themselves to the niche of adventure photography. The camera is built like a tank and designed to...
Most of the comments we made when summing up the D800 apply to its successor. The new camera steps into the flagship position in Nikon's 'pro-sumer' line-up and makes an already capable camera just a little better. Whether the enhancements are worth spend...
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Published: 2014-10-30, Author: terry , review by: dpexpert.com.au
Image quality is superb, both RAW and JPEG. The resolved detail from the high resolution sensor is breathtaking without any objectionable noise diminishing the sharpness. This is medium format quality in a 35mm body.
The weight! Does it really need to be this heavy or do Nikon think that this is what professionals expect? And the LCD does not swivel
When we reviewed the D800 in June 2012 we judged it the best camera for general use that we had ever tested. The D810 is still the prince of DSLRs. However, in 2012 it was unique, with its 36 megapixel sensor and that is no longer the case. The Sony a7r a...
High pixel count, No antialiasing filter for better detail resolution, 5fps shooting at fullresolution
Huge file sizes, No WiFi builtin, Moire interference be more of an issue
While it's disappointing that Nikon hasn't included Wi-Fi or GPS technology in the D810, it still seems like a good, solid upgrade that promises to deliver what's most important to photographers – better image quality. Few would've expected an increase i...
The D810 is an outstanding pro-level DSLR with the highest resolution on the market, extremely impressive autofocus capability, a long battery life, a fast processing engine, and a wide range of other features for both stills and video. After testing the...
The D810 is an incredible camera that excels in many different types of photography, including landscape, portraiture, and action; all of which lend themselves to the niche of adventure photography.The camera is built like a tank and designed to take seri...
Nikon D810 FX-format Digital SLR Camera Body ReviewIf you are a D800 user, you are probably wondering whether the D810 is really worth the upgrade. Having used the D800 myself for the last 2 years (and the D700 for 4 years), I can safely say the answer fo...
One of Nikon's best gets even better. When the Nikon D800 dropped two years ago it instantly became known for its absurdly high-resolution sensor and excellent image quality. The ability to crop zoom or downsample and retain a high-resolution final im...
Superb stills – as rich as 35mm film, High-quality Full HD movies, Excellent build and feel
Expensive, Heavy, bulky, No built-in Wi-Fi
The Nikon D810 is a slam-dunk Editors' Choice. Our only serious knock is the price – $5,000 total if you add quality glass – which is serious money and places the DSLR in rarefied company. We can easily see pros and imaging artists taking the plunge. As...