
Design
Anyone who has seen or used the F80 (N80) will find the
D100's appearance very familiar. Indeed it appears as though much of the
camera design and layout was based on the F80. The single most obvious
difference is in the camera's height, where the F80 finishes just below
the lens mount the D100 has approximately an additional 20 mm (0.8 in)
of body. The D100 has all the echoes of a modern Nikon SLR, good clean
design with plenty of functional control. Nikon have this ability to produce
modern SLR's which still have the control appeal of a full manual camera.
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The D100 is a camera which feels 'just right' in your
hand, the hand grip size is almost perfect with a good sticky rubber coating.
Overall weight balance is very good, the camera feels relatively light
but solid and can easily be shot with one hand. Adding the optional battery
pack / portrait grip gives you the option to shoot vertically as well
as adding extra battery power, a remote jack, speaker and mic for voice
recording. Overall I preferred the way the D100 feels compared to the
EOS-D60.
Here we can see the two cameras which, for some buyers
at least, will be going head-to-head. On the left Nikon's six megapixel
D100 with its modern design and yet 'manual appeal'. On the right Canon's
six megapixel D60, a proven camera design but now slightly lacking in
the tactile control feel of the D100. Although you would think there is
more in it the D100 is just 9 mm (0.4 in) taller than the D60, the higher
position of the Nikon lens mount perhaps making the D100 seem taller than
it is.

LCD Monitor
The D100 has a sharp and bright 118,000 pixel 1.8" LCD monitor.
This provides image review and menu control display. The screen itself
is mounted directly below the viewfinder and despite not having the excellent
anti-reflective coating of its bigger brother's (D1, D1H, D1x) monitors
is still fairly easy to see in sunlight thanks to its high output. Nikon
supply the D100 with a transparent protective cover (BM-2) for the LCD,
this simply hooks on just above the monitor and clips below. This cover
ensures you won't damage the screen but can continue using it. Kudos.
For those who are new to digital SLR's it's worth noting that they don't
provide a live preview image like consumer digital cameras. This is because
of the reflex mirror, mechanical shutter and design of the sensor (which
can't be used to provide a video feed). The LCD is only "On"
if you have image review enabled (after taking the shot), when you're
navigating menus or reviewing images in play mode.

Status Panel
The D100's status panel (found on the top right of the camera body) provides
information about both the photographic (exposure, focus, drive etc.)
and digital (image size, white balance etc.) side of the camera. This
is a notable improvement over the D1, D1H and D1x which have two separate
status panel's. This new status panel provides a one glance summary of the
camera's overall setup as well as a readout of the current exposure.
The D100's status panel is backlit, this can be activated by pressing the
small backlight button beside the LCD or it can be programmed to come
on with any button press (via a custom function). One interesting 'left
over' from 35 mm cameras, the D100 is the first D-SLR I've used which
leaves the frames remaining counter on the status panel even when the camera
is switched off.

Viewfinder
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The D100's viewfinder
has a rubber eyepiece cup (which can be removed for accessory attachment).
The view itself is clear, bright and sharp with a good focusing
screen. To my eye the actual view itself appears to be very slightly
smaller than the D60 (although there's not much in it). Note that
the D100 does have a sliding dioptre lever tucked away on the right
hand side. |
Viewfinder view
Through the viewfinder you'll see the center-weighted
metering circle and five indicated AF area markers. Note that the active
focus area darkens when selected. The on-demand grid lines can be turned
on via custom function 19, these are useful for ensuring alignment when
taking landscape or architectural shots.
Along the bottom of the viewfinder view you will see
the status bar. This provides you with an overview of camera (photographic)
settings as well as exposure settings. The multifunction display gives
you a readout of available frames before the half-press and remaining
buffer space (e.g. r06) with the shutter half-pressed.

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