It is for quality pictures. The awesome pics taken by this camera. Their are so many features in this camera like. The Sensor resolution is nice. Battery working so good. A small and lightweight DSLR despite its plastic body feels pretty solid.
It is for quality pictures. The awesome pics taken by this camera. Their are so many features in this camera like. The Sensor resolution is nice. Battery working so good. A small and lightweight DSLR despite its plastic body feels pretty solid.
Nikon's 24-megapixel D5200 is the latest in a series of affordable, lightweight and high-performance DSLRs with pivoting LCD screens that appeared first in 2009 with the D5000. Positioned between the entry-level D3200 and the recently-announced D7100, it provides a significant increase in sensor...
The Nikon D5200 is the company's latest 'upper entry-level' DSLR, aimed both at beginners and those looking for a step-up from a basic budget model. Announced in November 2012, it comes just over a year and a half after its predecessor, the D5100.
Great image quality with low noise; 5fps continuous shooting; 39-point with 9 cross-type AF system; Partial manual video exposure; Clean 1080p HDMI video out
Reduced battery life; Lacks viewfinder eye sensor; Lacks touch-screen; Lacks Depth of Field preview; Slow and noisy kit lens
Advances from one version of a DSLR to the next tend to be minor, but the Nikon D5200 takes a bigger step than most. Not only has the autofocus system improved significantly over its predecessor, the D5100, but the sensor has been boosted too, from 16.2 megapixels to a massive 24.1 megapixels.
Nikon's D5200 sits in the middle of the most current triumvirate of Nikon cropped sensor DSLRs - the D3200, 5200 and 7100. Its MSRP is $100 more than the D3200 but it offers an articulating 3 inch monitor, an extra frame per second in its high-speed continuous shooting mode and a more advanced...
Good still and video image quality; Light and compact; Competitive high ISO performance; 5 fps continuous shooting speed; Capable autofocus system
Minimal external controls for adjusting camera settings; Lacks weather sealing of some direct competitors; 95% coverage of viewfinder makes accurate framing a bit problematic
Love it, great for a beginner. to read even more http://www.squidoo.com/d5200-nikon-camera-price-and-review-hottest-and-simplest-new-digital-camera
Nikon D5200 is a high speed; multifunctional high performance camera; with special effects that enable you to create expressions in still images and movies; Creativity and flexibility are reflected in every part of the Nikon D5200; The D5200 has a wifi adapter for instant sharing as emails or upload
It has no significant flaws; the lack of an autofocus motor in the body limits your lens-selection flexibility
Excellent camera. I have always had Nikon and have been very pleased, this camera is no exception. A bit complex for someone that has never used a SLR type camera. The instructions do not contain enough information on how to use the older manual lenses but I like the flexibility of a manual lens and...
Just shy of two years after the D5100, Nikon is releasing the successor to its popular DSLR model in a bid to counter its greatest competitor, the Canon EOS 650D.
New 24-Megapixel sensor; Quality build with pivoting screen; Low image noise up to 3200 ISO; Helpful illustrations; Stereo recording in video mode
AF in LiveView still too slow; Rolling shutter in video mode; Menu interface could be improved with clearer; more coherent choices; Not very different from the D5100
The Nikon D5200 fills the high-resolution gap in the company's middle-spec DSLR space by squeezing a brand new 24-megapixel CMOS sensor into the new model. It was inevitable, really; such a resolution gap didn't really exist until Nikon launched the 24-megapixel and apparent entry-level D3200.
Good picture quality; vari-angle LCD screen; decent autofocus system with motorised lenses
Experienced sharpness issues with first review sample body (not confirmed as an official; recognised issue as yet); banding in shadow areas when pushing raw file EV; poor movie clips with terrible interlaced tearing in playback; no touchscreen; lack of quick-access buttons on account of vari-angle...
Having spent most of 2012 updating its full-frame DSLR range with the addition of the D4 , D800 and D600 models, Nikon has shifted its attention back to its APS-C DSLR range with the launch of the upper entry-level D5200.
Impressive 39-point AF system; Continuous shooting speed of 5fps; Stunning image quality; Intuitive graphic user interface
Slow AF point positioning in Live View; Lags when previewing creative effects in real time; Noisy kit lens performance
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