>>3023314I own one. I originally intended to buy something smaller like an A7 or RX1 but found this one for really low price and had to get it. I've been using it for about half a year now and overall I like it. It has some annoying quirks but also a lot of redeeming features.
Pros:
>Fairly small and light for a full frame DSLR. It's smaller and lighter than a 5D and about the same size as a Canon 6D. Also build quality is good (lots of metal) and the camera feels surprisingly comfortable to hold.>Great sensor. 16mp is enough for me and lowlight capability is really good. Iso 12800 is absolutely usable and iso 25600 is still fairly good. Also thanks to the D4 heritage, the image quality stays pretty much the same from iso 100 to iso 1600.>Viewfinder is nice, bright and big.>Weatherproofed body>Physical controls feel confident and tactile to use.>One of the few modern Nikon bodies to accept old non-Ai lenses (the ai lever folds away).>Looks nice, old pro lenses fit nicely to overall aesthetics.Cons:
>Expensive AF when new>AF system isn't on the same level as on the D750 or D800/810. The area of the points is fairly small and only covers the center of the frame. Also, the AF doesn't work as good in totally dark areas (IMO not as big of a problem as one would think, I haven't really encountered any problems when shooting during the night.)>Menu system isn't as good as the one on D750.>Physical controls are otherwise OK but the iso knob won't work when using auto-iso. To activate manual iso adjust, I must do a menu dive and change it by hand. It would have been much easier to have auto-iso activation/disable on the knob itself.>No touchscreen. (I have one in my other camera and I constantly find myself trying to use one on the Df)>No video. (Retarded Nikon marketing decision, fortunately my other camera has good enough video)>The top screen is quite small and it only holds the most essential info. At least it's backlit.>No built-in flash