Differences | N75 $180 New | N80 $340 New |
Size | 131 x 92.5 x 65mm | 141.5 x 98.5 x 71mm |
Weight | 380g | 515g |
Viewfinder | Penta Mirror | Pentaprism |
View | 89% | 92% |
Flash Speed | 1/90 | 1/125 |
Control Dials | 1 | 2 |
External Control | IR Remote | Screw Cable |
Film Speed | DX only | DX and Manual |
Meter | 25 element Matrix | 10 element Matrix |
External Battery | AA + Extra Release | AA |
Internal Battery | 2CR | CR123A |
Top Speed | 1/2000 | 1/4000 |
Low Battery and End of Roll Indicators | In finder | On top only |
Extra 'Center Subject' AF mode | Yes | No |
More Special Functions | No | Yes |
Spot/Center/Matrix | By Menu and AF-L button | By dial with indicator in viewfinder |
Year of Introduction | 2003 | 2000 |
Both are very remote from the F3. Neither does anything without power. Neither would replace the utility of F3, but each can be had for the cost of an original Nikon strap for the F3.Interesting. I've never really looked at these cameras, mainly because I still use my F3's.
Can either be used without the internal battery?
Also, as there is no explanation from your good self, why the posting? Just wondering.
It's an interesting comparison, as they look like siblings that were separated at birth or something. I owned the N80 and N70, never had a N75. Neither of those worked well for 3rd party lenses. The N80 can't meter w/ them, and even though the N70 would happily meter w/ anything you could put on it, it's somewhat darkish viewfinder made it difficult when doing stop down metering.
My impression is the N75 is the best Non-Pro AF camera they made
I don't see how any of these later models can compete with the N70 for real world use.
I'd recommend using them with NIKON brand AF lenses. Mostly AF-D compact lenses to take advantage of both camera's small size and features. Much better cameras out there for non-AF purposes.
View attachment 327800
Speaking of D lenses... I find them a bit "cheaply made". I've got a 28-80 that's just loaded with plastic...not sure that there's any metal in it. It takes good pics, just feels super cheap.
Differences N75 N80 Size 131 x 92.5 x 65mm 141.5 x 98.5 x 71mm Weight 380g 515g Viewfinder Penta Mirror Pentaprism View 89% 92% Flash Speed 1/90 1/125 Control Dials 1 2 External Control IR Remote Screw Cable Film Speed DX only DX and Manual Meter 25 element Matrix 10 element Matrix External Battery AA + Extra Release AA Internal Battery 2CR CR123A Top Speed 1/2000 1/4000 Low Battery and End of Roll Indicators In finder On top only Extra 'Center Subject' AF mode Yes No More Special Functions No Yes Spot/Center/Matrix By Menu and AF-L button By dial with indicator in viewfinder Year of Introduction 2003 2000
It’s a bit odd how they mixed and matched the specs of the two models. I don’t see what role each model was aimed at, do you?
Speaking of D lenses... I find them a bit "cheaply made". I've got a 28-80 that's just loaded with plastic...not sure that there's any metal in it. It takes good pics, just feels super cheap.
28-80 isn't a typical D. It IS cheaply made. It was a slow, inexpensive zoom that has surprisingly good optical performance for the price range. But it actually WAS cheap.
Much of the AF-D line is a bit more stoutly built, metal mounts and some body parts.
Honestly, if the nameplate on the N75 said “Mattel” instead of “Nikon” it would seem appropriate. Especially, the silver and black one.
But it IS a Nikon and it is so small, light and handy that it’s really a joy to use. The 28-80 kit lens compliments it well and so does the 50mm f1.8G. Anything bigger and heavier just defeats the purpose of the camera IMO.
If I didn’t have either a N75 or N80, I’d just buy which ever one was less money.
Honestly, if the nameplate on the N75 said “Mattel” instead of “Nikon” it would seem appropriate.
Anyone that thinks all D lenses are the same needs to check out the pro versions like the 85 1.4D.
The cheap Ds are cheaply made - or should I say not sturdily made - but they all have great optics.
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