Other D780 specs include dual UHS II SD card slots (not CFexpress, interestingly) and an EL15B battery, though we don’t yet know the claimed battery life for this. The rear screen doesn’t flip forward through 180 degrees for vlogging, either, but then many filmmakers and vloggers use external screens anyway. The optical viewfinder uses a classic pentaprism design with 100% coverage and 0.7x magnification, while round the back there’s a 2.36 million dot LCD display which tilts up and down but not sideways (so it’s less useful with the camera held vertically). Nikon D780 has twin UHS II SD card slots (Image credit: Nikon) With the on-sensor phase-detection AF of the Nikon Z 6, the D780 will offer much faster live view AF, with 273 AF points and eye detection. The live view experience, however, is transformed. You still have an optical viewfinder, and while you’re using it you get the same 51-point dedicated phase detection AF sensor used for so long (and to such good effect) in Nikon cameras. What Nikon has done is to effectively take the sensor, AF technology and processing power of the Nikon mirrorless cameras, in this case the Z 6, and fit it to a DSLR body. The new Nikon D780 offers the same resolution and a very similar design, but it joins the D750 in the Nikon range as a more advanced alternative – it doesn’t replace it. For first time full frame camera users, it's one of the best DSLRs currently available. The Nikon D750 has been one of Nikon’s long-running DSLR success stories, with its affordable price point (and getting cheaper over time), very good all-round image quality from its 24-megapixel full frame sensor and chunky but compact (for a DSLR) styling.
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