Nikon SLR Cameras

List of Cameras that have Blub shutter settings and not over 1thousand dollars?

Samantha
Samantha

Has to have blub shutter
Max- 1 thousand US dollars
nikon or canon.

Added (1). And only cameras where i don't have to buy the lens

Jim A
Jim A

Well if you don't want to buy a lens for a camera that sort of limits your options.

$1, 000 will buy you a very nice dslr with bulb setting but it, as all cameras do, requires a lens.
Most dslr cameras are offered with what's called a kit lens so it'll already have a lens with it.

There are bridge cameras available that don't cost that much. These cameras have a static lens that's permanently mounted to the camera and many have a bulb setting.

However beware how far you take this bulb thing. Sensor heat is a real threat and problem for all digital cameras. When the shutter release is pushed the sensor is operating gathering light data.
As it's doing that there's millions of electrons flowing through the sensor which cause it to heat.
Too much heat and the sensor will burn up. That's why most camera makers limit the length that the sensor can operate safely without being damaged.

What ever camera you get read the instructions about bulb shots very carefully lest your burn up your new, probably expensive camera.

jonal
jonal

Almost all 35mm SLR and rangefinder cameras
Most compact 35mm manual cameras eg Iford Sportsman
Most bellows cameras of the Nettar and Kodak type
Many box cameras
Many digital compact cameras
Almost all bridge cameras
All DSLRs, entry level to top spec, from Nikon Canon Pentax, Minolta, Sony, etc
B is a common setting to find on cameras above the point and shoot level having manual control.
Less common now is T for time exposure. One press to open the shutter, another to close it, so you don't need a locking cable release to keep it open.
Keep it open all day if you want. Or months. On DSLRs extra care must be taken to protect the sensor.
A film frame wasted is peanuts. A sensor replacement costs a lot of money.
Nikon F4.35mm… 8 sec - 8000th plus B T and an X setting for flash synch
image
Leica dial… No T

AWBoater
AWBoater

The only cameras that exist that you don't have to buy the lens are compact cameras.

Although I have not done an exhaustive search, I have yet to see a bridge camera with a bulb mode. No bridge camera I have seen from Canon, Nikon, Panasonic, or Fuji has a bulb mode. And Pentax has discontinued all compact cameras so they no longer make bridge cameras. So I don't know what those posers above are talking about.

The only non-interchangeable lens camera I have seen with a bulb mode is the Fuji X100 and similar - but those are in the $1, 000 range.

Nikon's flagship P7100 can be used in manual mode up to 60 seconds, but there's no bulb mode. However, the P7100 can use a IR remote to wirelessly fire the trigger. So I suppose in a sense it has a psuedo-bulb mode, but is limited to 60 seconds or less.

Even the $800 Canon G1x does not have such a mode, but it has the same 60 second manual mode (and no remote).

Anything that would have a true bulb mode is going to be an interchangeable lens.