Right, its time to upgrade. The D60 won't quite do what I want it to do, no AF, no metering on AiS lenses. And the fps is very very low. Using a E Series F2.8 135mm I wasn't quite getting what I wanted shooting British Superbikes at Brands Hatch, and whilst some of it is technique, and some of it was dust trapped between the lens and the filter (and filter stuck on), some of it was the camera. Or at least some of it could have been reduced on a better camera. I might have hit more shots, and got a better keep rate with the ones that I hit.
So, the choice appears to be the D300 second hand (less than £400) or a D7000 (£620 at the best UK price I've found). I know the differences on paper, 8fps with the grip vs 6fps, bigger buffer, 51pt AF vs 39, 12mp vs 14, but how does it actually work in real life? I know the real answer is the D400, but I don't have £1500 to drop on a camera. If I did, I'd rather buy the 300 and get a better lens (the E Series above and a Vivitar Series 1 70-210 F3.5 are the best I have, and I know that both are manual only.
At the minute, I am weighted more towards the D300 as the extra £220 is not worth it for what I will be using it for, and there are advantages to the D300 too. Plus the extra £200 would buy a second hand f2.8 70-200 Sigma. Am I wrong?
So, the choice appears to be the D300 second hand (less than £400) or a D7000 (£620 at the best UK price I've found). I know the differences on paper, 8fps with the grip vs 6fps, bigger buffer, 51pt AF vs 39, 12mp vs 14, but how does it actually work in real life? I know the real answer is the D400, but I don't have £1500 to drop on a camera. If I did, I'd rather buy the 300 and get a better lens (the E Series above and a Vivitar Series 1 70-210 F3.5 are the best I have, and I know that both are manual only.
At the minute, I am weighted more towards the D300 as the extra £220 is not worth it for what I will be using it for, and there are advantages to the D300 too. Plus the extra £200 would buy a second hand f2.8 70-200 Sigma. Am I wrong?