Nikon D800 with Nikkor G ED lens and camera bag.
I purchased this Nikon D800 in and hardly ever used it, shutter count is around . The camera has no visible scratches, nor does the lens. The camera is in pristine condition, everything works and functions as it should. effective) megapixel full-frame (35.9 mm Γ 24 mm) sensor with ISO (ISO boost) Nikon Expeed 3 image processor pixel RGB metering sensor with Advanced Scene Recognition System Advanced Multi-CAMFX autofocus sensor (51-point, 15 cross-type, 11 points sensitive at maximum apertures as small as f/8) H.264/MPEG-4 AVC Expeed video processor. p Full HD movie mode at fps, 720p at fps, HDMI HD video out with support of uncompressed video output, stereo monitor headphone out, and stereo input (3.5-mm diameter) with manual sound level control. 4 frames per second in continuous FX mode or 5:4 crop mode. 5 frames per second in continuous 1.2Γ crop mode or DX (APS-C) mode. With the optional MB-D12 battery grip, fitted with either the EN-EL18 battery pack of the D4 or AA batteries, continuous shooting at 6 frames per second in DX mode is supported. Buffer size for 17 RAW or 56 JPEG with maximum quality. Built-in High dynamic range imaging (HDR) mode (2 frames up to 3EV apart) 'Active D-Lighting' with 6 settings and bracketing (adjusts metering and D-Lighting curve) Customizable 'Picture Control' settings affecting exposure, white balance, sharpness, brightness, saturation, hue; allowing custom curves to be created, edited, saved, exported and imported[5] Pop-up flash that doubles as a wireless flash controller USB 3.0 connectivity Image sensor cleaning Shutter rated at actuations Live View with either phase detect or improved contrast detect Auto Focus Dual card slots, one CompactFlash UDMA and one SD, SDHC, SDXC, UHS-I and Eye-Fi (WLAN) compatible card slot (mirror, overflow, back-up, RAW on 1/JPEG on 2, Stills on 1/Movies on 2, copy)[6] Magnesium alloy weather-sealed body comparable to D700, but considered less robust than D4 GPS interface for direct geotagging supported by Nikon GP-1