Don't think any of your lenses are DX if made by Nikon and all will work on your FX camera.
Yes Stewart, I would tend to shoot planes, birds and things which need telephoto. What camera apart from the D300 would you then consider which is an improvement on the 300?
Yes Stewart, I would tend to shoot planes, birds and things which need telephoto. What camera apart from the D300 would you then consider which is an improvement on the 300?
I have been dissatisfied with a lot of my D300 shots with respect sharpness. In fact have had the camera checked by Nikon UK for £70 plus VAT and they claim to have, and I quote
BODY DEPTH ADJUST
RESET MIRRORS
TEST AF ACCURACY, METERING, EXPOSURE AND ADJUST TO NIKON STANDARDS
What about all that for a good camera. Tried to speak to someone to find out why all these needed attention, if at all and to speak to the person who worked on the camera with no joy. The camera is back and quite honestly I dont feel there is any difference. Went out today with an older D40 with the same lenses, 70-200vR and 300f4 and the results are far superior, and from a much cheaper camera. I am getting p----d off with the 300 and feel it is still not right but dont know where to turn. Feel like cutting my losses and just getting rid of it. Maybe its a Friday camera!! Would go to Canon if I didnt have so many lenses. Thats what I am at!!
I have been dissatisfied with a lot of my D300 shots with respect sharpness. In fact have had the camera checked by Nikon UK for £70 plus VAT and they claim to have, and I quote
BODY DEPTH ADJUST
RESET MIRRORS
TEST AF ACCURACY, METERING, EXPOSURE AND ADJUST TO NIKON STANDARDS
What about all that for a good camera. Tried to speak to someone to find out why all these needed attention, if at all and to speak to the person who worked on the camera with no joy. The camera is back and quite honestly I dont feel there is any difference. Went out today with an older D40 with the same lenses, 70-200vR and 300f4 and the results are far superior, and from a much cheaper camera. I am getting p----d off with the 300 and feel it is still not right but dont know where to turn. Feel like cutting my losses and just getting rid of it. Maybe its a Friday camera!! Would go to Canon if I didnt have so many lenses. Thats what I am at!!
Check the in-camera sharpness setting, Nikon are known for having a default on the soft side for their pro cameras -- many people seem to prefer this for pp. Canon bodies seem to be set to do a little more sharpening and consumer bodies are typically set pretty high -- but it's just a setting.
If it's on default you will likely see some softness; just push it up a notch and see how that looks. BTW are you looking at NEFs, JPEGs, or both?
You could also download a focus testing target and rule out it being a lens/camera focus problem.
I have been dissatisfied with a lot of my D300 shots with respect sharpness. In fact have had the camera checked by Nikon UK for £70 plus VAT and they claim to have, and I quote
BODY DEPTH ADJUST
RESET MIRRORS
TEST AF ACCURACY, METERING, EXPOSURE AND ADJUST TO NIKON STANDARDS
What about all that for a good camera. Tried to speak to someone to find out why all these needed attention, if at all and to speak to the person who worked on the camera with no joy. The camera is back and quite honestly I dont feel there is any difference. Went out today with an older D40 with the same lenses, 70-200vR and 300f4 and the results are far superior, and from a much cheaper camera. I am getting p----d off with the 300 and feel it is still not right but dont know where to turn. Feel like cutting my losses and just getting rid of it. Maybe its a Friday camera!! Would go to Canon if I didnt have so many lenses. Thats what I am at!!

Thanks guys for being critical. I would like nothing more than for it to be operator error so at least I would know what to work on. My current problem is I have loads of photos of 'sitting ducks', literally and with even a high shutter speed they are not sharp. Another batch done yesterday with the D40 and the same lenses and subjects are much better (IMHO) Will post up some images - thanks for all your comments.![]()
Thanks Pete. The sitting ducks were hardly moving bout when they were I used continual servo a and dynamic area focusing (nikon) Here are some images and I hope the EXIF data is there. Cant understand softness/out of focus with such high shuttet speeds...
Sharpest point appears to be smack in the middle![]()
Have you done comparison A vs B pics with the D40? Have you read the thread I linked to earlier? Have you followed those test guide lines?
Whatever the cause, it's simple focusing error. Could be fixed as easily as selecting the right focus point. At worst, a camera focus calibration job. Easy either way![]()
Hoppy he has AF-S not AF-C selected, he needs AF-C selected.

Thanks guys for all that bewildering advice. you're beginning to convince me its me and not the camera. Will get back in due course with my thoughts but answer me this one. When I go into the details of my shots I cant find where it says AF-C OR AF-S. How do I get that? Can get the other info eg aperture, speed etc. I thought I was using AF-C and had the front swithch on 'C'. Also had dynamic area focusing on. Do they not go hand in hand or can one be on without the other? BAck later![]()


For those familiar with Nikon can I check the camera settings.
1)in auto focus a1 - AF-C priority selection i have - Release (should it be release + focus?)2) in "" "" a2 - AF-S priority selection I have - Focus
3) in a3 - dynamic area I have 21 points
When in continual servo are you ALWAYS in dynamic mode?
I was shooting in the 'big white rectangle' auto focus area mode - is this the wrong one to use? When do you use it - landscapes?
There'll be more questions later. I do understand the difference between C and S mode and I thought most of the time I was in 'C' mode with dynamic area but you say I wasn't![]()


