Just how rugged is the D300?
InsuredDisaster
Registered Users Posts: 1,132 Major grins
I have a question about my D300. I recall reading that it was weather sealed and had a magnesium body or something like that, but what does this mean in real world terms? Can I shoot in a steady drizzle? A drenching downpour? A quick dunk?
I recently had a "waterproof" camera suggest anything but so I'm curious about what the actual users say about their D300's.
Thank you.
I recently had a "waterproof" camera suggest anything but so I'm curious about what the actual users say about their D300's.
Thank you.
0
Comments
I've been caught is a heavy rain with my D300 on a couple of occasions w/o a problem so far. I would not attempt to dunk it (or any other camera) in water.
http://behret.smugmug.com/ NANPA member
How many photographers does it take to change a light bulb? 50. One to change the bulb, and forty-nine to say, "I could have done that better!"
http://sartinphoto.com
Nikon Stuff (not that it really matters)
While I'm not looking to run out in the rain and start dancing with the camera, it does rain a lot some times and I want to get some more rain shots, without needing to cover the camera up in trash bags and what not.
*well, not "ok", but you can do it?
http://sartinphoto.com
Nikon Stuff (not that it really matters)
For his sake or the cameras?
Actually, I also had trouble with the rain drops a while back. I tried the hood and it helped but only so much. When I turned the camera portait wise, of course the hood offered only "half" as much protection as in landscape.
But if you say you had him run back when it was "raining pretty hard" then I guess that means a lot for the D300.
Thanks for the answers everyone!
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The seals are better on the D300. Just look at the 10-pin cable release cover and the seals over the usb/hdmi and battery connector.
I beat the heck out of my gear. It's generally in my hand or bag. I find the butterfly lens shades to provide good bumper protection for the front of the lens and they are cheap to replace when broken. Yes you an set it down on wet surfaces but that dried beer smells if you don't clean it up after a day.
That said. I shot a D70 in the blowing talcum-fine dust of the Antelope canyons. The environment took out a 10.5mm lens but the camera was fine.
Now if 'rugged' means drop resistant then YMMV. Don't drop them. It's like dropping a 2-3 pound cell phone. Don't knock it over when mounted 5 feet above the ground to a tripod. If you do. You may have to replace the lens mount on that nice fixed 300mm f/4 lens but you might not have any damage done to the camera body (I was lucky - it hit soft dirt)