Easy to handle and well balanced even with 18-140mm lens
Really hard and tedious connecting to wifi ; not much useful support from Nikon
Easy to handle and well balanced even with 18-140mm lens
Really hard and tedious connecting to wifi ; not much useful support from Nikon
I purchased the D5600 because it was light. I was tired of carrying my old Nikon. I tried a small Coolpix which was O.K. but you can't do much with it. The D5600 is much lighter and the lenses from my old Nikon fit. I should have just purchased the camera back.
Nikon has developed a habit of releasing minor upgrades to existing DSLR cameras and the D5600, announced in November 2016, differs only marginally from the 18-month-old D5500 . When we reviewed that camera, we described it as a 'modest update to the D5300 ', which itself wasn't hugely different...
Bought this for my daughter for her first professional camera, she has it out everyday. I am amazed how clear the pics are and how easy it was for her to use. It is a sturdy and good quality product. Considering we bought over the holidays, the Harvey team were exceptional. Thanks Harvey :)
Light and compact for a DSLR; good image quality from the kit lens; Great battery life; I was going to buy a mirrorless micro four thirds camera; so glad i didn't
The snapbridge app that I was really after does not work with windows phones which is what I own, I have had to buy an Android phone to run the camera, I would really like Nikon to make the app for windows; (snapbridge workd with Ios but I would never buy an iphone
If you are relatively new to photography and are thinking of buying a DSLR, the chances are that you already have Nikon on top of your list, and have already been sucked into the great "Canon vs. Nikon" debate.
Compact body; Image quality; Battery life
UI can be overwhelming for beginners; Some shots seem too bright (auto mode; SnapBridge can be erratic
After reviewing the Nikon D3400(Review) , we finally prepared the review of Nikon's D5600 DSLR for you. And the review was equal fun as that of D3400. Well, indeed both the cameras are priced differently and there's no point of comparing the two, however there are still some points that we'll...
Brilliant image quality; Captures precise colors; Great low light performance; Tons of features; Fantastic Autofocus; Smooth and Easy to use controls; Super fast touchscreen; Images are less grainy at high ISO; Effects feature is good; Snapbridge works well; External Microphone support
Live display does not show current adjustments; Focus gets tricky in low lighting (depends on lens as well; Still a Pentamirror viewfinder; Video recording captures too much of lens sound; Lacks facial recognition
Nikon sprinkles a tiny pinch of update dust on the D5600, a minor improvement to its small but excellent and inexpensive D5500 dSLR. The camera comes in a few kits. Nikon typically charges $700 for the body (AU$1,100); the main kit with the AF-P 18-55mm lens is $800 (£800, AU$1,250); the main kit...
The Nikon D5600 delivers excellent photo quality for its price class; as well as performance that can keep up with your kids and pets
It may be too small for people with larger hands and it turns off the self-timer after every shot in single-shot mode
Love the camera and lenses but the case is too small for everything. The 2 extra batteries that comes are not compatible with the Nikon D5600.
Good camera takes nice photos and the 70-300 lense is a must have! glad i went with the twin lens kit saves shelling out twice as much to get it later.
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