Nikon’s Z6 III brings a lot of the flagship options of Nikon’s far costlier Z8 and Z9 to the Z6 line. The Z6 III (8/10, WIRED Recommends) options Nikon’s 24-megapixel partially stacked CMOS sensor, very quick and correct 3D subject-tracking system, and ProRes encoding for video—making it among the best hybrid, photograph/video cameras in the marketplace.
The “partially stacked” bit means you get a number of the efficiency advantages of a stacked CMOS sensor, like these discovered within the Nikon Z8 and Z9, however not the downsides, or a minimum of fewer of the downsides. Stacked sensors, ahem, stack the processing circuits proper on high of the sensor itself (technically it is behind the sensor), which implies the RAM is immediately tied into the sensor, making for extremely quick readout. That is what permits high-end cameras to shoot upwards of 12 RAW photographs per second with out the viewfinder blacking out. The draw back to stacked sensors is that you just run into some rolling shutter distortion with shifting objects, and there’s usually much less dynamic vary. The Z6 III’s partially stacked sensor is an try to minimize these downsides, and it principally works. The 5.76-million-dot viewfinder has a blazing quick 120-Hz refresh fee and is insanely shiny and fantastic (it helps full HDR colour house). The again panel is not unhealthy both, with a 2.1-million-dot show and full articulation, which makes it simple to shoot video from just about any angle.
The principle draw back right here is the Z6 III has a couple of cease much less of dynamic vary than its opponents, however in precise real-world use, I did not discover this to be an element.
Specs | |
---|---|
Sensor measurement | 24 MP Partially Stacked Full Body |
Max Photograph Body fee | 12 fps RAW |
Video | 6K/60p RAW |
★ Alternate options: For extra decision, there’s the Nikon Z8 for $3,397, which could be very almost equivalent to the Z6 besides it has a better decision, 45 MP absolutely stacked sensor, and some extra on-camera buttons (the Z8 additionally has a sensor protect to guard it when altering lenses, which I really like). The Nikon Z5, however, is among the least expensive full-frame cameras. Typically on sale for round $800, the Z5 is a stripped-down Z6. It is a barebones digital camera, however for some that is likely to be all you want.