Nikon 1 V3 for Walkabout Wildlife | a 7 Image Story What the V3 does well, it does very well. Now, the V3 is my preferred carry camera for capturing daily walkabout images including local wildlife. It shoots much like a DSLR in continuous mode. Although a bit noisy at higher ISOs, the image quality is quite good, particularly for posting. The 2.7 crop factor helps improve images where getting closer is not an option, like distant wildlife. Would I only take it to Yellowstone NP and leave my DSLRs at home? Well yes, if a light travel pack is required. Still, I’d rather take both my DSLRs and the V3.
My journey with the Nikon 1 series cameras and lenses started with the V1, skipped the V2, and embraced the V3. The V3 fixed several annoying V1 traits. Also, handling, auto-focus, and metering improved dramatically. The Nikon 1 V3 became a reasonably nice camera for capturing wildlife images. I’ve captured a wide variety of wildlife images on my local walkabouts including birds, small critters, larger mammals, and insects. Thus far, my data base contains over 75K+ V1 and V3 images with over 1330 posted on this blog.
In a nutshell, what specifically do I like about the Nikon 1 V3 for wildlife images?
- The Nikon 1 V3 is relatively small and light to carry. Carrying heavy gear all day hiking gets old, fast.
- With it’s 2.7 crop factor, it adds inexpensive reach to my telephoto lens allowing me more flexibility in framing critters.
- It’s easy to carry with a telephoto lens attached, like the AFS 70-300mm & FT-1, using the sun sniper shoulder strap.
- Image quality seems quite good unless a really large print is required.
- With a little practice, it can be panned handheld to capture moving critters.
- The tilting LCD reduces the time spent hugging the ground to get that low angle shot.
- While I seldom use video, a short video makes a nice addition to wildlife posts.
- Of course, most Nikon AFS lenses work nicely, using the FT-1 adapter.
The V3 presents a few more challenges over my DSLRs!
- The Nikon 1 V3 requires a bit more camera discipline than a my DSLRs. The controls sometimes move during normal handling so the photographer must often check to ensure the settings are correct.
- Panning in low light can be demanding and a high ISO generates a good bit of noise.
- The small camera frame, attached to a long, heavy telephoto lens, does not seem balanced; making handling a bit tricky. The Nikon AFS 70-300mm works nicely, whereas, the AFS 70-200mm; not so much. Also, care must be taken not to break the camera mount with a heavy telephoto lens. Always carry it by the lens or the FT-1, not the camera.
- Higher ISO images sometimes require a pass through noise reduction in post processing.
- Changing the battery and/or the MicroSD card in the field takes some time and care.
- Build quality is more consumer than professional. If dropped, it can break.
What’s next? Nikon has discontinued the Nikon 1 V series; too bad. A V4 camera could have addressed several V3 issues to become a really great camera. Nikon has introduced two full frame mirrorless cameras, the Z6 & Z7. To me, the Z6/Z7 cameras are more a replacement for my DSLRs than the V3. Perhaps, after I have an opportunity to try the Z6 or Z7, I’ll feel differently. It’s not yet clear what my next carry camera will be; maybe another V3.
Each image will be posted individually this week with a bit more narrative under category Nikon 1 V3 for Walkabout Wildlife.
Click any image below for a slide show!
My Nikon 1 V3 walkabout kit fits into a very small Lowepro camera backpack. The camera equipment includes a Nikon 1 V3 Body, Nikon FT-1 Adapter, 1 VR 10-30mm f3.5-5.6 PD-Zoom, 1 VR 30-110mm f3.8-5.6, AFS 50mm f1.4G, and a AFS 70-300mm f4.5-5.6G IF-ED VR. The supporting equipment includes a Nikon Speedlight SB-N5 Flash, LitePanels MicroPro Hybrid, Sennheiser MKE 400 Directional Mic, Sun Sniper Shoulder Strap, Extra Nikon EN-EL15 Battery, Nikon MH-25 Charger, Extra SD Cards, Lens Cleaning Supplies, and a Headlamp with red & white light. A small MeFOTO tripod has its own bag. Find more Nikon 1 V1 and V3 experiences posted under IMHO. On local walkabouts, I usually only carry the camera with a lens and one other lens in my pocket.
Great post. I had a V3 but dropped and broke it. 😥. Now have two V1s, which I find more rugged, and I like the built in EVF. Miss the tilt screen.
Thanks Eric. I dropped my V1 and broke the battery door. Taped it with electrical taped and it kept working until the shutter gave out. That experience has made me more careful with the V3s. My first V3 worked fine until the shutter quit. My 2nd V3 is still working, but the rear wheel stopped working. It has a high shutter count, but I still use it with a long lens attached. My 3rd V3 has a low shutter count. The V3s seem to take a lot of use and wear as long as they do not get dropped.