Firstly, apologies for resurrecting an 18 month old thread, but the content is very pertinent to my question/dilemma.
I've had the D3100 for 2 years and it was my first dLSR, so the learning curve started there, but I think i've outgrown it?? (if thats what its called)
With the recent price drop and Nikon cashback offer, I've 99% convinced myself that its time to move from D3100 to D7000 (hell, even the wife isn't objecting)
I see this move as setting myself up for my next couple of years shooting, but I still have questions and queries.
Wants from D7000:
Quicker access to AF modes (hunt in menus on D3100, external on D7000), metering access less required, but nice to have.
The extra control dial in A/S/M modes, although I sort of get by putting ISO on the Fn button on my D3100. Is the rear D7000 ISO button better or worse than the D3100 Fn method?
Confused over focus points:
I'm a single/middle point sort of guy, recompose if required in AF-S, but spend most of the time in AF-C. (I've also been using back button focusing lately too)
How would the D7000 help me when chasing my 2 kids around..... damn they move quick.
Reading about Auto, S, d9, d21, d39 and 3d is confusing the hell out of me. And the only time I got to play with a D7000 instore, the viewfinder lit up like a Christmas Tree.
What would/could change for me with regards focus points and tracking?
Lenses:
Apart from the 18-200, i'm not worried about the lenses I have not being upto the job; Tamron 17-50 2.8 Non-VC, Sigma 70-200 2.8, Nikon 18-200 VR and Nikon 35mm 1.8. I think they're not a bad set.
Quality Improvement:
I'm not expecting night and day improvement from ISO and general picture taking, but i'd be happy with a little uplift as about 30% of my photos are 800 ISO and above.
Playback:
Love the idea of being able to see the focus point on the screen on playback. Always worried i've not hit the right spot.
Auto-ISO:
Yes, semi-cheating, but i'd like to use Auto ISO a little more. But its a royal pain activating etc on the D3100 and there appears to options to get it on/off more quickly on the D7000.
Anything else i've missed? There probably is, so I may well add to those when it pops back into my head. :bonk:
I know a few of you who originally commented on this thread have made the same jump i'm considering, so any thoughts, comments or advice would be very much appreciated.
Cheers, Mick