Realising that it’s a bit of an ask to slip the book into the back pocket when going forth, D300 in hand, to capture the world on a CMOS sensor, the publishers have included a pop-out, pocket-friendly reference guide inside the back cover, spelling out the key operating features of the camera.
Nothing is missed or glossed over: ISO noise gets a look in as do the benefits of manual over auto focus. Capture formats — JPEG, TIFF, NEF (RAW) — get intensive treatment in 17 pages of text.
To give you some idea of the depth of info in the book, there is even detail on the MIRED system of defining colour shifts and how to fine tune white balance precisely.
You are given instructions on how to hold the camera, deal with white balance and how to use Nikon’s useful D-Lighting feature. The latter has been around for some time but I bet few have bothered to dig deeply into its wonders — thanks to the minimal info in the supplied manual — as it can be of enormous benefit in handling the brightness range and contrast curve of images shot with the D300.
The camera’s design is discussed, operating controls explained in detail, although the camera pictures are a bit on the murky side. An enormous amount of detail then follows: features and operating options; metering; viewfinder data; shooting modes; an explanation of how Live View works and on to batteries, the use of memory cards etc.
The guide begins by outlining the manufacturing story … the D300 is assembled in Thailand from mostly Japanese-made parts.
Third party manuals like this one from Simon Stafford fill an essential need in the whole business. This Nikon D300 handbook covers the camera in an exhaustive 400+ pages and doesn’t miss a trick.
I get to see an awful lot of digital cameras and I get to read a heap of instruction books and PDF files purporting to explain the workings of the cameras. And all are inadequate!
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