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N65

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Nikon N65


 
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Rating
Reviewed by: Jena
 (Professional)

Review Date
July 11, 2007

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

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Review 1 of 119

Price Paid:  $400.00 from Best Buy

Summary:

I bought this camera a little under 2 years ago with the 2 year Best Buy warranty and haven't needed to use it once, the warranty, that is. I am a professional photographer in the Ohio area and focus mainly on candid shots of people and nature. Kids tend to move a lot and the Nikon works great at focusing quickly to get the best picture.

I have never had a complaint about the camera, what it can do, or how it works. I've taught many classes using this camera as the main camera for the students, and they all loved it. Trust me, if you buy this camera, it's well worth the price and you won't regret it one bit.

Strengths:

Quickly focuses to take the shot no matter how much movement there is in the frame. Each picture comes out perfectly. The flash is great, not too bright, and it brings the right amount of light to the picture. Black and white film works great in this camera. Works well with all kinds of lenses.

Weaknesses:

None that I can think of.

Similar Products Used:

I have used Minolta and Canon brand cameras and none even come close to compare with this model of Nikon.



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Rating
Reviewed by: 

ScottShotsNV

( Professional)

Review Date
February 1, 2006

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
5.00 of 5,
1 votes

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Review 2 of 119

Price Paid:  $80.00 from eBay

Summary:

I've had this camera, as well as 2 N60's, a 6006, a D100, D70, Em, and several other Nikons. I agree with the post that this camera has the capability to service either novice or professional. I shoot mostly SLR Digital now, and I will be purchasing a D200 with my tax return, this is actually my second N65 and I got this one for about $80 including s&h, which I think is a very great deal! This is such a versitle camera.

Strengths:

I like that I can instantly shoot right as I turn on the camera, I like the matrix metering and although it sounds silly, I really like the built in speed light. True, I am a professional, but I'm also a Mom too. There's been many times I was just shooting some photos at a birthday party or a school event and didn't feel like hauling in my stroboframe and flash units.

Weaknesses:

I wish it had a MB unit that would allow me to bulk load batteries and advance the film quicker.

Similar Products Used:

Another N65, 2 N60's, D100, D70s, N6006i, EM, etc



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Rating
Reviewed by: 

dhwilliams

( Casual)

Review Date
September 10, 2005

Overall Rating
 4 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
3.67 of 5,
3 votes

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Review 3 of 119

Price Paid:  $0.00 from Norman Camera Kalama

Summary:

In the mid-1970s I thought I'd like to get into photography so I bought the best camera I could afford at the time, a 35mm SLR Yashica with TTL meter. It was pretty basic. Manual Exposure, Manual Focus, Manual Film advance etc. A couple of years later, zoom lenses began appearing on the consumer market and I began thinking I'd bought too soon but I kept the camera for 25+ years. I'd get enthusiastic about taking pictures and lug the thing around to special events and on vacations for a year or two and then tire of the whole experience and put it away for a year or two. I dug it out for a vacation to Mexico in 2001 and really enjoyed taking pictures again but didn't so much enjoy lugging around the bulky hard-shelled case needed to carry multiple lenses. On my return, I decided to get back into photography as a hobby and thought an equipment up-grade was overdue. I traded the Yashica for the Nikon N65, which was then new to the market. The kit came with a 28-80mm zoom. I've used this camera ever since but always with mixed feelings about whether I'd really "traded up". On the plus side, auto focus, auto exposure control, light weight and the composition flexibility afforded by the zoom lens make it as easy to use as a simple point & shoot. So I use it far more regularly than I ever used the Yashica. Photo quality is consistently good. It is very easy to take really good snapshots and nearly impossible to take really bad ones. I don't believe I've ever gotten an obviously over or under exposed or out of focused photo. My wife carries a point & shoot and the difference in the quality of the prints obtained from the two cameras is obvious. On the down side, the photos are not as sharp as those produced by the Yashica with its fixed length lenses and the same reduction in weight that justified the purchase still makes it feel like a toy. The image quality produced by usinf the various programmed fully automatic mode so good, I've pretty well forgotten what little I once knew about photography. The N65 can be used in fully manual mode or set up with Apurature or Shutter Speed priority Auto Exposure and the lens can even be manually focused so it is certainly possible to be creative but it is so easy to use it as a fancy point & shoot that I never over-ride the auto settings and doubt that many others do either. It could be a decent entry level camera for someone wanting to take up photograpy as a serious hobby but I really think it is best suited to people who want better than average point & shoot snapshots. If I had it to do over again, I would still buy this camera for taking snapshots but would have passed on the trade-in allowance and kept the metal-bodied Yashica and collection of fixed length lens for more limited use when I was feeling creative.

Strengths:

Multiple progammed auto exposue modes, reliable metering & auto focusing. Light weight and overall ease of use.

Weaknesses:

Packaged kit lens is very good but not as fast or razor sharp as higher priced Nikon zoom lenses or most fixed length lenses.

Customer Service:

It is surpisingly reliable and durable despite the plastic body. In 4+ years, I've never needed service.



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Rating
Reviewed by: 

candy4less

( Casual)

Review Date
July 14, 2005

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 4 of 5

Used product for
3 Months to 1 year

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Review 4 of 119

Price Paid:  $200.00 from Wolf Camera

Summary:

This camera is a great camera for beginers but has the ability to become manual as your ablity increases.

Strengths:

Ease of use ability to up grade

Weaknesses:

Focus in low light can not find a focal point film does not have the option to stay out so a person can use the rest of the film or switch between roles



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Rating
Reviewed by: 

picturesinmyhead

( Professional)

Review Date
January 14, 2005

Overall Rating
 4 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
1.00 of 5,
2 votes

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Review 5 of 119

Price Paid:  $0.00 from Stolen from ex-girlf

Summary:

this was my first camera. I've taken amazing pictures and with those in my portfolio i have gotten some work here in the orlando area.

Strengths:

In order: 1. Ease of Operation 2. A camera is only as good as it's lense. Nikon has a wide variety of quality optix. Comparing Pentax and Minolta. 3. price. 4. If you steal it nobody is going to miss it. 5. Sells easy on ebay.

Weaknesses:

1. Can't shoot infrared. 2. Can't set film speed. Which means you can't buy bulk and wind it. 3. Meter is average. Bracketing is important with this camera. Don't beat yourself up over the weak metering system. Even with a top of the line f100 nikon you will get consitency with a hand held meter. 4. No spot metering. 5.

Customer Service:

Never broke down. Works like a swiss watch.



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