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Nikon D5000 review

in Digital cameras

Verdict

A huge amount of camera for the money, and with HD video to boot, the D5000 walks away with a well-deserved prize

Review Date: 14 Oct 2009

Reviewed By: Dave Stevenson

Price when reviewed: £433 (£498 inc VAT)

Buy it now for: £16
(see more store prices)

Overall Rating
6 stars out of 6

Features & Design
5 stars out of 6

Value for Money
6 stars out of 6

Image Quality
6 stars out of 6

PCPRO Recommended


But this is a DSLR, not a dedicated video camera, and when it comes to stills the Nikon is the best camera here overall, able to produce some superb images. The autofocus system is directly derived from the higher-end D90, with 11 focus points to the Canon 500D's nine. It also has a 3D tracking mode, allowing the camera to move the focus point as a subject moves across the frame, or in response to the frame itself being recomposed.

In the area that Canon has traditionally stolen a march - high ISO noise performance - Nikon is now the equal of its rival. It's only when you go up to ISO 1600 that noise really begins to make itself felt at all, and ISO 3200 is as usable as the previous generation was at ISO 1600. The D5000 has an ISO 6400 extended-sensitivity option too, but we'd still shy away from it in all but emergency situations. It's an exceptionally good performance overall, though.

For occasional sports use the D5000 is the best in its class: it's the first mid-range DSLR to feature a burst frame rate of 4fps - which our testing confirmed it really does achieve - and, in conjunction with the 3D-tracking autofocus, your ratio of hits in sport and wildlife photography should get a marked lift.

You also get one of our favourite tricks: the ISO Auto mode. This lets you explicitly set the maximum shutter speed at which the camera starts to increase the ISO level to compensate for low light. If you're really concerned about finessing your images, the D5000 can even correct the inevitable slight geometric distortion caused by your lens, as long as it's a Nikkor model (Nikon's own lens brand). Not only that, but it can deal with chromatic aberrations too, effectively giving the stock lens a software-based upgrade.

In terms of detail, the D5000's 12.3-megapixel sensor loses nothing to the higher pixel counts of others this month. Although Nikon's default sharpening settings are less aggressive than most, upping the sharpening settings from the default gives results as good as any other camera on test.

With a recent price drop making the D5000 a little cheaper than the Canon 500D, the D5000 is the obvious place to spend your money. There's little doubt that the Nikon basic picture-taking capabilities are markedly - if marginally - superior. Overall the D5000 is the best DSLR you can currently buy for less than £500.

Author: Dave Stevenson

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User comments

The D5000 also offers 720p HD video recording, putting it in the elite company of the Canon 500D and Panasonic GH-1

But some way behind the Canon 550D with 1080p.

By Lacrobat on 21 Jul 2010

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