Nikon D600 / D610 for Sports and Wildlife Photography

As I have pointed out in my D600 Review, I am quite pleased with the autofocus performance of the D600 and the D610. These cameras acquire focus quickly and accurately in most situations and in my opinion works more reliably than the AF system on the Nikon D7000. This past weekend I had a chance to do a much more demanding test on the D600, photographing Colorado wildlife. I wanted to see if the D600 / D610 would be suitable for photographing sports and wildlife, since many of our readers have asked me to do that in my review.

NIKON D600 + 200-400mm f/4 @ 400mm, ISO 400, 1/800, f/4.0

I started out photographing birds first. Small birds can be tough to photograph, since they move constantly and they fly fast. My primary subjects were Clark’s Nutracker and Steller’s Jay – both were very active, so they were perfect for testing the speed, responsiveness and the reliability of the AF system of the D600. I started out in AF-C mode, Ch release, Dynamic 39 points and Focus Tracking with Lock-On set to 3 (Normal). Focusing on perched birds was very reliable and I got a lot of keepers. I even used other focus points in the extreme corners while composing my shots and the images came out in perfect focus. However, the moment a bird would take off, I had a hard time tracking it in flight with my Nikon 200-400mm f/4 VR (hand-held), since they were too fast. Very often they were too close and too fast, which made it harder to get anything in the frame and in focus. Gladly, I was not the only person having this problem – Tom was standing right next to me with his Nikon D4 and Nikon 500mm f/4 VR and he was having similar issues. So I knew it was not the camera at fault.

NIKON D600 + 200-400mm f/4 @ 400mm, ISO 250, 1/800, f/7.1
NIKON D600 + 200-400mm f/4 @ 400mm, ISO 220, 1/800, f/7.1
NIKON D600 + 200-400mm f/4 @ 400mm, ISO 200, 1/800, f/5.6
NIKON D600 + 200-400mm f/4 @ 400mm, ISO 360, 1/800, f/5.6
NIKON D600 + 200-400mm f/4 @ 400mm, ISO 200, 1/800, f/5.6

Having photographed birds with the Nikon D3s before, one thing that I really enjoyed about the D600 was its new Auto ISO implementation with an “Auto” value for the “Minimum Shutter Speed” (previous generation cameras do not have this feature). When photographing birds, I set my shutter speed to be double the speed of the focal length and it worked out great. And when I needed to go faster than that, I set the “Auto” value to +2 (Faster) and my shutter speed would be tripled (3 full stops), giving me enough speed to get fast action. The nice thing about this setting, is that I went back and forth between 200mm to 400mm and the shutter speed would be compensated automatically. At 300mm, setting Auto to +2 would give me 1/1250 shutter speed, which was often good enough for birds in flight. However, when I needed to go faster, I would switch to a desired shutter speed instead. I turned off VR most of the time, since my shutter speeds were fast enough.

NIKON D600 + 200-400mm f/4 @ 330mm, ISO 160, 1/800, f/5.6
NIKON D600 + 200-400mm f/4 @ 330mm, ISO 140, 1/800, f/5.6
NIKON D600 + 200-400mm f/4 @ 400mm, ISO 320, 1/800, f/5.6

As you can see from the images here, the Nikon D600 did really well with perched birds. All images posted here are very sharp and you can see individual feathers on birds at 100% view (none of the images were taken to Photoshop – these are crops out of Lightroom, with little sharpening applied upon export). Both the D4 and the D600 had a hard time tracking fast little birds in flight with Dynamic AF, so Tom and I both switched to 3D AF mode, with Focus Tracking set to 1 (Short). We then both started to get some shots of birds in flight in focus and the hit/miss ratio started to get better. My biggest challenge was to try to keep birds within the smaller AF zone (which is smaller on the D600). Overall though, the Nikon D4 still had the edge as far as AF performance and accuracy in my opinion. But I cannot say that the D600 was much worse either – it performed surprisingly well in this environment.

After photographing birds for about an hour, we took off to take some pictures of bighorn sheep and elk:

NIKON D600 + 200-400mm f/4 @ 400mm, ISO 560, 1/800, f/5.6
NIKON D600 + 200-400mm f/4 @ 240mm, ISO 220, 1/500, f/5.0

The detail level on each image is very high. Take a look at the below image of the Male Elk:

NIKON D600 + 200-400mm f/4 @ 290mm, ISO 100, 1/800, f/4.0

And here is a 100% crop:

NIKON D600 + 200-400mm f/4 @ 290mm, ISO 100, 1/800, f/4.0

Lastly, I took a couple of pictures after sunset of a running female elk. The first image was shot at ISO 3200 and the second one was shot at ISO 1600. Both images have plenty of detail and very acceptable noise levels.

NIKON D600 + 200-400mm f/4 @ 250mm, ISO 3200, 1/320, f/5.6
NIKON D600 + 200-400mm f/4 @ 250mm, ISO 1600, 1/500, f/4.0

If you shoot at higher ISO values, you might want to run some noise-reduction before you down-sample the image to get the best results.

Overall, I am quite impressed by what the D600 can offer to sports and wildlife photographers. While the AF system is not as robust as the one on the D4/D800, it is still a very good AF system that is far better than the one on the D7000 in my opinion. I have not performed any tests with Nikon teleconverters, but I am sure they will work just as well. More to come, since I am planning to visit Bosque Del Apache later this year and use the D600 for bird photography there!

This information has been added to my review of the Nikon D600.
Exposure data (EXIF) is kept in all images for your reference. A follow-up Nikon D610 review has also been posted.

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