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Reviews of Nikon D3100

Testseek.co.uk have collected 114 expert reviews of the Nikon D3100 and the average rating is 81%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Nikon D3100.
Award: Recommended October 2010
October 2010
 
(81%)
114 Reviews
Users
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0 Reviews
81 0 100 114

The editors liked

  • Well built
  • Fast and responsive
  • Fairly priced
  • Buttons large and obvious
  • Small and light. Quick autofocus. Good photo quality.
  • Despite sitting at the low end of Nikon's digital SLR range
  • The Nikon D3100 is an excellent camera. It features similar styling to much more expensive cameras
  • With an oversized handgrip
  • And it's a robust and well made solution. The kit lens is particularly impressive. It offers impressive colour reproduction
  • And pin-sharp photographs. Noise is very well contained
  • Even in dark conditions
  • Mak
  • The best HD video Nikon DSLR yet. Compact and light. Swift autofocus. Noob-friendly Guide mode
  • Impeccable image quality up to 1600 ISO and very good up to 3200 ISO
  • 1080p Full HD video
  • Wellmade and pleasant to handle
  • General responsiveness
  • Small
  • Light
  • Guide mode and helpful options for new DSLR users
  • Lightweight yet robust construction
  • Fast and responsive for an entry-level model
  • Reasonably priced
  • Large
  • Well-labelled buttons and controls
  • Built-in 'guide' mode
  • Live View a welcome addition
  • HD video capture
  • Great sensor and processor
  • Robust build
  • Decent value for money
  • Full HD video capture
  • Shoots HD video
  • Autofocus in movie and live view modes
  • Good image quality for the price
  • Intuitive controls and guide menu for beginners
  • Good low light abilite
  • Guide Mode
  • Full HD movie capture
  • Well-handled image quality

The editors didn't like

  • Small-ish handgrip
  • Video not as easy to access and use as on Panasonic and Sony rivals
  • No stereo sound or manual controls for video.
  • The Nikon D3100 is competing in an increasingly crowded market
  • And it struggles to differentiate itself. It's good
  • Yes
  • But there are also impressive options available from Canon
  • Olympus and others. The D3100 also lacks manual controls when filming videos
  • Stopping you from adjusting certain settings.
  • No external mic socket. No manual controls for video. Average screen
  • Screen displays just 230
  • 000 dots
  • ISO Auto
  • Confusing handling
  • Autofocus only with AFS lenses
  • Very warm white balance under halogen lighting
  • Hard to find below £450
  • Handgrip is on the small side
  • Video not as quick or easy to shoot with as other dSLRs
  • Not quite pro-standard build quality
  • Small handgrip
  • Video not as instantaneous or easy to access as Sony’s A33
  • Autofocus makes noise in movie mode
  • Fixed LCD screen
  • No exposure bracketing
  • Pricier than many entry-level models
  • No Depth of Field preview button
  • Limitations to movie capture

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Reviews

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  Published: 2011-02-17, review by: digitalcamerareview.com

  • The D3100 turns in a solid performance wiith good image and color quality. Video recording mode has some limitations.

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(80%)
 
  Published: 2011-02-03, review by: pcworld.com_techhive.com

  • Shoots HD video, Autofocus in movie and live view modes, Good image quality for the price, Intuitive controls and guide menu for beginners, Good low light abilites,
  • Autofocus makes noise in movie mode, Fixed LCD screen, No exposure bracketing,
  • The D3100 is an entry-level DSLR on the higher end of that category's price range. However, it has a great set of features for beginning photographers, and decent image quality. ...

 
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(70%)
 
  Published: 2011-02-01, review by: digital-photography-school.com

  • Abstract:  This review got off to a bad start: the DX format camera arrived just before a long holiday break… without a battery and fitted with a less than ideal (for review purposes) f4.5/55-300mm lens (equivalent to 82.5-450mm on an SLR). So it just sat on the...

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  Published: 2010-12-14, review by: imaging-resource.com

  • Compact, comfortable body, Good ergonomics, plenty of well-positioned external controls, Dedicated Live View switch and Movie Record button, Drive mode switch reduces menu accesses, Excellent image quality from the new 14-megapixel CMOS sensor coupled ...
  • No bracketing capability, Auto and Incandescent white balance very warm in tungsten lighting, No in-body image stabilization (but bundled kit lens has vibration reduction), Won't autofocus with older "screw-drive" AF lenses, No improvement in...
  • While the Nikon D3100 carries a list price slightly higher than that of the company's most affordable SLR, it offers a number of very worthwhile improvements that make it easy to justify the extra cost. Key among these for most photographers will be it...

 
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  Published: 2010-12-11, review by: dcresource.com

  • Abstract:  The D3100 is Nikon's entry-level digital SLR, priced from just $699 with an 18 - 55 mm lens. The D3100 is a very user-friendly camera, with help screens and a unique "guide mode" that literally spells out what you need to do in order to get the shot y...

 
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  Published: 2010-11-29, review by: photographyblog.com

  • If you’ve read the entire review, you will probably agree that the Nikon D3100 produces image quality that defies its entry-level status. Compared to the one-year-old D3000, Nikon has managed to simultaneously increase the pixel count and improve qual...

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(90%)
 
  Published: 2010-11-09, review by: photographybay.com

  • In short, the Nikon D3100 is an excellent entry-level camera. The only real detraction from this camera is the crippled video capture mode, which fails to completely serve the needs of the consumer (no reliable autofocus) or enthusiast (no manual expo...

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  Published: 2010-11-04, review by: whatdigitalcamera.com

  • Guide mode, featured specification
  • Price, no DoF preview, no focus switch
  • Although the D3100 may stretch the ‘entry-level' price point (thus its biggest drawback on the score board), it equally stretches the sheer amount of specification you're getting too. Usually always on the money, it's only the slightly sluggish autofoc...

 
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(89%)
 
  Published: 2010-11-01, review by: cameralabs.com

  • 14 Megapixel sensor with great quality, Friendly goal-oriented GUIDE mode, 1080p HD video with autofocusing, Decent metering and 11-point AF system.
  • Relatively expensive for an entry-level DSLR, Continuous AF in movies can be slow and noisy, No bracketing, DOF preview or AF with non AF-S lenses, Changing multiple settings requires many clicks.
  • With the D3100, Nikon has delivered what's arguably the most powerful entry-level DSLR to date. The image quality looks great, there's both Live View and 1080p HD video, and one of the friendliest user interfaces on the market. So it's the best budget...

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  Award


(84%)
 
  Published: 2010-10-27, review by: g4tv.com

  • Abstract:  Video Review: When it comes to a high quality DSLR, look no further than Nikon and their new D3100 with a 14.2 megapixel sensor, X Speed 2 image processor and video recording. Kevin Pereira and Milynn Sarley explore the $650 DSLR kit to review its new ...

 
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(80%)
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