![manual for nikon p900 manual for nikon p900](https://www.manualowl.com/manualimages/9/s/nikon-z-7ii-reference-manual-456c62d_1_4ed8.png)
Tutti i manuali su possono essere visualizzati gratuitamente. The hummingbird is to show off the fact that you can see his individual feathers, and that was a tiny bird at a pretty decent distance. Visualizza di seguito un manuale del Nikon Coolpix P900. I could have gotten better ones if he hasn't vanished. The vireo photos aren't good, but they're identifiable, and that's not half bad with all that stuff in the way and how active the bird was.
#Manual for nikon p900 how to#
I don't use manual focus because I couldn't figure out how to get the manual focus to work, and also because the tiny dippy birds move so fast that I don't have time for manual focus. It is two pounds and change, but I don't think you can get this much zoom with much less (if any less) weight. I can't compare it to the others, I haven't tried them, but I've gotten some really nice photos with this one. So if you can get that square on a bird behind branches, it works. In that option, it focuses on whatever's in the tiny square in the center of the screen. I have the P950, and it has a point-focus option. This post is a humble query to see if anyone knows of something I may have missed. After hours of searching, I am convinced that this camera does not exist. So I keep looking for a Canon, or Panasonic, or anything, that can give at least moderate zoom (60x please, I am used to 83x after all), a manual focusing ring, and relative light weight. Also not excited about the reported poor battery performance. I have had the opportunity to hold one, though, and the massive bulk and weight of this thing makes me a bit less enthused about it. The P1000 is the natural, if $$$, candidate for me to go with as a replacement, because it keeps all the good features of the P900, extends the zoom, and adds a ring for manual focus (!). Frustrating to watch it go from one blur of the bird to a different blur as you pray it finds the focus before the bird leaves. I kept reaching for a focus ring to rapidly make the image crisp. I have a long list of lovely birds that where just sitting there for the photo, but which the P900 could not get a decent focus on before they flew off. There is a manual focus override but I found it too slow and tough to use, as there is no focus ring on te lens. Several drawbacks of the P900 - the lengthy time needed for the internal motors to zoom (not a show-stopper), but far worse, the poor perfrormance of the autofocus when dealing with a bird that is far back and behind layers of branches and leaves, etc. I have no interest in carrying a large telephoto lens / heavy camera around. A tool to help with a tricky ID, or to document a rarity, or to use via lots of zoom to basically function as a small scope and get me birds that my bins cannot.Ģ. I am not a serious photographer, I am a birder that likes to use a camera as a tool. I would like another bridge camera because:ġ. My Nikon P900 has mostly served me well, but it has suffered some dings of late and after 2.5 years of constant use and abuse I think I may move on.