Nikon’s newest Z6 digicam brings the digicam maker’s top-end autofocus to a extra moderately priced, mainstream digicam. In practically each method that issues, the brand new Z6 III matches or outperforms the corporate’s a lot pricier, top-end Nikon Z8.
Though it isn’t good, the Z6 III is among the finest full-frame mirrorless cameras available on the market, and it is able to dealing with just about any photographic state of affairs most of us are going to come across. Panorama and wildlife execs will most likely keep on with their Z8s for the higher-resolution sensor, however for everybody else, that is the Nikon to get.
Leaping Ahead
Nikon’s new Z6 III is a a lot greater improve than the earlier model was to the unique. It brings many of the flagship options of Nikon’s far dearer Z8 and Z9 to the Z6 line.
The physique design has been tweaked, although it isn’t massively totally different from the Z6 II. The digicam weighs 1.7 kilos, which balances properly even with bigger lenses, and Nikon’s grip is the largest I’ve used, making it snug and straightforward to hold. In contrast to the retro-inspired Nikon Zf, there aren’t a ton of exterior controls right here. There is a dial to vary taking pictures modes, together with a number of different dials, buttons, and scroll wheels, which all provide you with loads of customizable choices that you could arrange as you want, however it lacks that film-inspired really feel of the Zf.
The flagship options within the Z6 III are the brand new, partially stacked sensor (extra on that under), an up to date, very quick and correct 3D subject-tracking system, and ProRes encoding for video. There are additionally a slew of nice little updates that make on a regular basis taking pictures a greater, smoother expertise.
The Z6 III encompasses a new 24-megapixel CMOS sensor, which Nikon calls a “partially stacked” sensor, by which it means you get a few of the efficiency advantages of a stacked CMOS sensor, like these discovered within the Nikon Z8 and Z9, however not the downsides, or at the very least 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 suggests the RAM is straight 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.