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Nikon
D3x vs Canon 1Ds Mark III

Few days ago, thanks to Michele (www.passionenatura.com), I have had the occasion to compare my Canon 1DsIII with
new Nikon flaghship, the 24 megapixels Nikon D3x. When it has
been announced, the D3x has been heavily criticized for its
high price: a $ 8000 SLR has still a market today, when $ 2500
SLRs offers similar performances at 1/3 the price?
Yes and no. Yes, because in some
aspects the D3x and the 1DsIII are better than their cheaper
alternatives (more rugged, 100% viewfinder, state of art
autofocus), and the photographers that value these aspect will
accept to pay the premium price to have "the best".
No, because if I had to choose now I'd no longer buy the
1DsIII or another $ 8K camera: cheaper cameras does the 95% of
what you can do with 8 K cameras, and that's enough for me,
even for professional work. With the money I'd save I'd make a
couple of nice trips, or I'd buy a new lens or a RED Scarlet
:-)
Anyway, the D3x is an amazing
camera; it is on par with the Canon 1DsIII, and in some
aspects it is even slightly better! I have made a detailed
comparison at every ISO sensitivity and I have tested the
camera on the field photographing birds. Image
quality comparison I
have photographed the same scene with the Nikon D3x and with
the 1DsIII; both photos had been taken at 70mm f/11, with
tripod and mirror lock up. The images had been taken in RAW
and converted with RawTherapee (I prefer Adobe Camera RAW, but
currently it does not support the Nikon D3x). All the
parameters where on the same values; I have disabled
sharpening and noise reduction.

The image above is the test
target, and the area highlighted in red, in the center of the
image, is the area shown in the following crops. In terms of
dynamic range the two cameras are identical, and the
resolution is similar (the D3x has a slight advante, but it is
a minor difference), so I have focussed my attention on noise.
Usually I show 100% crops, but since here the differences are
minimal here I show 200% crops.
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Nikon
D3x |
Canon
1Ds Mark III |
| 50 |
 |
 |
| 100 |
 |
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| 200 |
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 |
| 400 |
 |
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| 800 |
 |
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| 1600 |
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| 3200 |
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I think that these crops speack
by themselves: the image quality of the Nikon D3x and 1DsIII
is identical, at every ISO sensitivity! Moreover, remember
that looking at 200% crops from these cameras is like looking
at wall-sized prints; if you don't see any difference here,
you will never see it on the web or in print.
Image
quality, 100% crops
Since I have received many
request, I have added some 100% crops from the same image.
Here it is even more difficult to see any difference - they
produce very similar image quality!
|
Nikon
D3x |
Canon
1Ds Mark III |
| 50 |
 |
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| 800 |
 |
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| 3200 |
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In
the field: White Heron with Nikon D3X and Nikkor 600 f/4 AF-S
VR
I have tried the Nikon D3X for
bird photography, together with the Nikkor 600mm f/4 AF-S VR
and teleconverters. I think you need to spend months with a
camera before giving a judgement, so consider my words just a
preview!
I am used to the Canon 1DsIII,
and with the D3X I feel...at home. The layout of the controls
is slightly different, but overall they are very similar
cameras: the image quality is similar, the speed is similar,
both have a large body and bright, clear viewfinder, and fast
autofocus. I have used the camera at every ISO sensitivity and
I think it is usable up to 3200; only 6400 looks a bit
"over the top", even though in some situations it
may still be usable. For sure it is noisier than the Nikon D3, but it is on par with the 1DsIII, and it is much better
than the previous Nikon D2X!
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| 100%
crop from the previous photo. |
The image above shows a detail
from the previous photo. I think that the D3X can do even
better - the subject was far away and it was moving quickly,
and in these situations it is difficult to get the best
sharpness. Nevertheless, in my opinion the image quality is already
excellent - it has good detail and very low
noise (keep in mind it is taken at ISO 800!).
Overall, it is difficult to find
something to complain into the D3X - the only real cons is the
price!
Do you have
comments or questions?
If you have comments or questions about this
article, feel free to ask in the Juza
Nature Photography Discussion Forum!
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