The 36.3 MP
Nikon D800E SLR has a CMOS image sensor with dimension of 35.9 x 24.0 mm.
This camera has dimension of 146 mm x 123 mm x 81.5 mm mm and weights 900 ggrms.
This camera has in build flash having flash range of 12 m and flash modes Front Curtain Sync, Slow Sync, Rear-curtain Sync, Red-eye Reduction, Red-eye Reduction with Slow Sync, Slow Rear-curtain Sync, Auto FP High-Speed Sync Supported.
It also having additional features like Red Eye Reduction, self timer, Face Detection, white balancing.The 36.3 MP
Nikon D800E SLR has a CMOS image sensor with dimension of 35.9 x 24.0 mm.
This camera has dimension of 146 mm x 123 mm x 81.5 mm mm and weights 900 ggrms.
This camera has in build flash having flash range of 12 m and flash modes Front Curtain Sync, Slow Sync, Rear-curtain Sync, Red-eye Reduction, Red-eye Reduction with Slow Sync, Slow Rear-curtain Sync, Auto FP High-Speed Sync Supported.
It also having additional features like Red Eye Reduction, self timer, Face Detection, white balancing.
Much has been said about Nikon D800, Nikon D800E is pretty much the same,the general specifications are almost all the same in both the devices. The device in both forms however has raised the bar a little too high for all the competitors, Nikon D800 really is getting close to delivering medium format quality but in the smaller, quicker and more affordable DSLR form factor. Nikon D800 isn't just about still image quality though. In the three and a half years since Nikon D700, Nikon has greatly improved the video recording capabilities, bringing it much closer to Canon while boasting a few neat tricks its rival lacks. Indeed Nikon D800 shares almost exactly the same video specifications as the flagship D4, while also inheriting its 51-point AF system, 91k metering sensor and 3.2in screen. As a top-end Nikon DSLR, the ergonomics and build quality are superb.
Nikon D800 shares the same AF system, i guess which is somehow economically and technologically better Nikon D4, which is, in technical terms the 'Advanced' Multi-CAM 3500FX AF sensor, and sports a massive 51 AF points points (15 of which are cross-type sensors) as the plain Multi-CAM 3500FX in the earlier D700, but this time the advanced part refers to its ability to autofocus at slower apertures between f5.6 and f8, albeit with a reduced number of 11 AF points. Nikon D800 essentially shares the same 3.2 inch screen which has a colour pixel resolution of a whooping 920,000. Although the preliminary aspect ratio of 4:3 has been kept intact meaning means images in the native 3:2 aspect ratio are shifted to the top of the screen, leaving a black bar along the bottom for shooting information. The power has has shifted from the EN-EL3 of the D700 to the EN-EL15 for the D800, quoting 1000 and 900 shots for each camera respectively. So the battery life has reduced, but not by a significant amount. Nikon D800's CMOS sensor delivers images with a maximum resolution of 7360x4912 pixels, which at 300dpi can be reproduced at 24.5x16.4in. These features are pretty much common in both Nikon D800 and Nikon D800E, what makes it different is that Nikon D800E employs a modified filter system which effectively removes the part which blurred the image. The advantage is greater potential for fine details, although the downside is greater potential for visible disorganisation. All being said and done, Nikon D800E like Nikon D800 is definitely a must buy, if you are looking for a DSLR at this instant of time.