Introduction
Because of cameras like the new Nikon D40, industry pundits expect close to 2 million D-SLRs will be purchased in 2007. Because of its $599 price—with lens—it nicely bridges the gap between high-quality point-and-shoot digicams and those who want to take their photography one step beyond--and also don’t want to go broke.
Nikon caused quite a stir in December 2006 when the D40 arrived. Nikon typically goes for the higher end and feels consumers should pay a bit more for its uptown brand. I cut my teeth on the fabled Nikon F2 35mm camera back in the day and always have a soft spot for the company. But there are limits. There’s no reason to spend a bundle on a D-SLR when the 8MP Canon Digital Rebel XT and 6MP Pentax K100D are around for under $600. In a turnaround, Nikon met the competition head-on with the 6.1-megapixel D40. And this camera is clearly targeted to D-SLR newbies unlike the recently reviewed Pentax K10D. Should you go for this one or set your sights a bit higher? Let’s find out…

The Nikon D40 is a good camera for the money. Photo quality is better than acceptable, in fact, it's downright fine.

by Craig on December 21, 2007:
“I tried Canon. This little Nikon produces much sharper and much contrastier images. I love it. You buy Nikon because of the glass. They are an optics company, not a copier company. Why 6 megapixels? I'll trade m-pixels for dynamic range, low noise, and high...” More...