
Timings & File Sizes
As you will clearly see from the timings below the D100
is one of the fastest digital SLR's we've had the pleasure to test. Power
on is instant no matter what media used, indeed the camera hints that
it will always be ready because of its always visible top panel remaining
frame counter. Other functions are equally quick, review images appear
in a second or so, browsing images is instant and entering magnify mode
takes not more than two seconds (unless you try to magnify a RAW file).
Remarkable considering the amount of data being shunted around the onboard
circuitry.
Timing Notes: All times calculated as an average
of three operations. Unless otherwise stated all timings were made on
a 3008 x 2000 Large / Fine JPEG image (approx. 2,500 KB per image).
The media used for these tests were:
- 512 MB SimpleTech Type II Compact Flash card
- 512 MB Lexar 16x Pro Type I Compact Flash card
- 1 GB IBM Microdrive Type II Compact Flash card
| Action |
Details |
Time,
seconds
(SimpleTech CF) |
Time,
seconds
(Lexar 16x CF) |
Time,
seconds
(Microdrive) |
|
Power: Off to On
|
|
<0.1 |
<0.1 |
<0.1 |
| Power: On to
Off *1 |
|
<0.1 |
<0.1 |
<0.1 |
 |
| Record: Review *2 |
JPEG |
1.2 |
1.2 |
1.3 |
| Record:
Review *2 |
RAW |
2.3 |
2.3 |
3.2 |
 |
| Play: Image to Image
*3 |
JPEG |
<0.5 |
<0.5 |
0.5 |
| Play: Image to Image
*3 |
RAW |
<0.5 |
<0.5 |
0.7 |
| Play: Thumbnail view
3 x 3 |
|
1.6 |
1.3 |
1.9 |
| Play: Magnify mode
*4 |
JPEG |
2.1 |
2.1 |
2.7 |
| Play: Magnify mode
*4 |
RAW |
5.2 |
5.2 |
6.1 |
| *1 |
Assuming all buffered
images have been written out to storage card, otherwise camera will
remain 'on' until images have been written away. |
| *2 |
Time taken from
the shutter release being pressed to the review image being displayed
on the LCD monitor. If you have histogram display mode enabled the
histogram is overlaid approximately half a second after the image
is shown. |
| *3 |
This is the amount of time between each image,
as you can see it is virtually instant. If you have histogram display
mode enabled the histogram is overlaid approximately half a second
after the image is shown.
|
| *4 |
The D100 operates
by having a separate 'magnify' mode, this is executed by pressing
the ENTER button in play mode. Once in magnify mode you can magnify
and scroll at will using a combination of the thumbnail icon button
and the main or sub command dials. |

Continuous drive mode
To test continuous mode the camera had the following
settings: Manual Focus, Manual Exposure (1/350s, F3.5), ISO 400. It was
soon discovered that no matter what image output setting the shooting
rate was always 3.3 fps (+/-0.2 fps). So, instead of testing the shooting
rate I instead measured three different parameters:
- Number of frames - How many shots can be taken before the buffer
fills
- Next shot - How soon after a burst of shots you can take the
next shot
- Full write - How long a burst of shots takes to be processed
and written to the CF
The media used for these tests was a 512 MB SimpleTech
Type II Compact Flash card.
| Image |
Number
of frames |
Next
shot *1 |
Full
write *1 |
| RAW |
4 |
5.8 sec |
26.8 sec |
| Large JPEG Fine |
7 |
1.3 sec |
16.1 sec |
| Large JPEG Normal |
7 |
0.4 sec |
11.8 sec |
| Medium JPEG Fine |
7 |
0.6 sec |
12.9 sec |
| Small JPEG Fine |
8 |
0.7 sec |
8.2 sec |
| *1 |
This is dependent
on the speed of the CF card and size of the image (higher ISO = more
noise = larger JPEG size), although these timings should be fairly
typical. |
The D100 has a parallel CF writing system, this ensures
that when there are images in the internal buffer they are being written
out to the CF card no matter what the camera is doing. This is a better
approach than the EOS-D60 which unfortunately pauses buffer writing while
the shutter release is half or fully depressed. As long as their is space
in the buffer the camera will take the next shot, you do not need to re-depress
the shutter release.
Because of this the camera nearly always manages to get
at least one image written out while you're taking a burst, this meant
that in our tests the camera achieved one more than its specified burst
buffer ability (3 for RAW, 6 for JPEG). Indeed for Small Fine JPEG files
the camera was able to write two images away and thus achieved 8 frames
in a burst.

File Flush Timing
Timings shown below are the time taken for the camera
to process and "flush" the image out to the storage media. The
D100 continues to process images in the buffer and write data out to the
storage media in parallel to you composing (and taking) the next shot.
During the write process the following menu options / settings can not
be modified: Bank Select, Image Quality, Resolution.
The media used for these tests were:
- 512 MB SimpleTech Type II Compact Flash card
- 512 MB Lexar 16x Pro Type I Compact Flash card
- 1 GB IBM Microdrive Type II Compact Flash card
| Store image |
Time,
secs
(SimpleTech) |
Time,
secs
(Lexar 16x) |
Time,
secs
(Microdrive) |
Approx.
File size |
Approx.
512 MB card |
| 3008 x 2000 RAW |
6.6 |
6.3 |
8.1 |
9.5
MB |
51 |
| 3008 x 2000 RAW comp. |
40.3 |
40.8 |
42.5 |
4.5
MB |
102 |
| 3008 x 2000 TIFF |
29.7 |
29.5 |
29.2 |
17.3
MB |
28 |
| 3008 x 2000 Fine |
3.5 |
3.6 |
4.1 |
2.5
MB |
151 |
| 3008 x 2000 Normal |
2.3 |
2.6 |
3.7 |
1.4
MB |
297 |
| 2240 x 1488 Fine |
3.2 |
3.4 |
4.3 |
1.5
MB |
269 |
| 1504 x 1000 Fine |
1.6 |
1.6 |
2.2 |
0.7
MB |
571 |
| *1 |
Timer was started
as soon as the storage compartment light came on and stopped when
this light went off. This was seen as the actual recording time. |
As you can see you pay a large time penalty when using compressed RAW
mode, over forty seconds per image. JPEG write figures are around one
second slower than Canon's EOS-D60 which took just 2.2 seconds to store
a 2.5 MB 3072 x 2048 Fine JPEG.

Battery life
The D100's EN-EL3 1400 mAh battery pack provides plenty
of stamina, this relatively small and light battery goes on and on from
just a single charge. It's clear that the use of this small high powered
battery pack has helped Nikon keep down the overall size of the D100.
|