In a little over a week, I am off to Italy for the Monza F1 GP
Now if it rains, how are rain covers? Are they worth it? Will the D300 be fine in the rain?
None of the nikon gear is weather sealed
Peter
None of the nikon gear is weather sealed, need to confirm, as its a quote from another thread when talking about taking equipement out in the rain. I use rain covers and equipment stayed dry. You can used a black bag as a cheap option or do a search on TP, I'm sure there lots of threads recommending rain covers.
Peter
Eh? Yes it is - very well sealed in fact.
I never use rain-covers as I've found they trap more moisture in than without (unless you're in a static position - moving around, water eventually gets under them regardless) and as a few people on here will recall I make no special precautions over rain, other than to wipe the optics regularly...
I appreciate all the responses, thanks!
Now obviously you use the pro kit, but what about the D300 specifically?
DPReview.com said:There are numerous rubber gasket seals around body seams, controls and compartment doors. Nikon don't claim the camera to be waterproof but it's certainly more 'weather proof' than the average digital SLR. Remember that the camera is only as weather proof as its weakest link, this includes the lens mount and only a few of the more recent Nikkor lenses have rubber seals around the mount ring.
I know the D300 is not pro kit
As above, Nikon classes the D300 as a pro body. See the following web page listing their current range of professional bodies. The D300 is right there!As above, Nikon classes the D300 as a pro body. See the following web page listing their current range of professional bodies. The D300 is right there!
http://www.europe-nikon.com/family/en_GB/categories/broad/318.html
If you need a weather-sealed camera, buy a weather sealed camera.
I realise that doesn't help in the slightest if you've already bought one that isn't...also bear in mind that if I actually paid for my kit, I'd probably be a lot more careful with it - well maybe not - it was my lens that took a dive into a river a couple of months ago...still working...lol
All the 'fast' Nikon optics are classed as 'Pro' as those are the ones we're most likely to buy.
I'll admit that I don't really keep up to date with the latest offerings from any of the manufacturers - I could get by with three lenses: a 17-35 f/2.8; a 28-70 f/2.8 and a 70-200 VR f/2.8 - all three of which are 'Pro' lenses - even though the 17-35 and the 28-70 are at least 15 years old now...
However, I would think a 15 year-old lens would easily be as well-sealed as a new budget lens, wouldn't you?
I think if I were covering a Sports event, I would wrap the cameras in something like the Kata rain-sleeves we get issued (and which I steafastly fail to use), but for 'moving' work, I'd just keep them slung so as to avoid the worst of the rain...
Oh and Coffee Shops offer excellent rain protection, I've found...

...I am not even go to ask about how a lens takes a dive into a river.... actually I am, WTF happened?
None of the nikon gear is weather sealed
After...lol
I had to tell them to stop laughing...
What is the source of this information, I'd like to ask? My D200 as well as D300/D700 and D3/D3x are all weather sealed bodies (better than Canon 5D MkII I'd say considering the last Luminous landscape arctic outing).
The lens are another matter and only some Nikkor lenses have some sort of mount seals but still lenses alone do not constitute all "nikon gear".
Having said that, I have used my D200 in the pouring rain for about 2 hours with Sigma 10-20 and it was absolutely fine (apart from being soaking wet). That is the Nikon weather sealing for you![]()