Nikon's HDSLR system is endlessly expandable. From legendary NIKKOR lenses and Nikon Speedlights for endless creative expression, your system can grow with you.
Manufacturer: Nikon
Nikon's HDSLR system is endlessly expandable. From legendary NIKKOR lenses and Nikon Speedlights for endless creative expression, your system can grow with you.
A terrific camera! It has everything you could wish for. Fast and precise autofocus. You can push the ISO rate is soaring and the pictures are still really good. A cannon product! Better get there with DX sensor!
The Nikon D7200 makes the 2-year-old D7100 look like a terrific deal. With only minor improvements over its predecessor, the D7200 remains a great camera, but given the D7100's lower price, the D7200 is a tough sell unless you're a night owl or long burst shooter. Once the D7100 evaporates from the market -- or the price stops dropping and starts rising -- then the D7200 will seem more compelling. It's the same pattern the D7100 faced over the D7000 before it.
The Nikon D7200 is a great camera for the money, as long as you don't care about an extensive feature set.
Great photo quality; solid performance and a sturdy body are the Nikon D7200's highlights.
Subpar wireless implementation and a fixed LCD display.
It's been a couple of years since the Nikon D7100 ($899.00 at Amazon) wowed us with its image quality and performance. Its successor, the D7200 ($1,199.95, body only), offers modest upgrades, including a larger shooting buffer and built-in Wi-Fi, but despite these improvements, we're not rating it quite as high as the D7100. The reason is simple: stiffer competition. Cameras like the Pentax K-3 and K-3 II, the Sony Alpha 77 II, the Samsung NX1 ( at Amazon) , and our Editors' Choice, the Canon EOS 7D Mark II ($1,499.00 at Dell) , also capture images with excellent quality, but shoot faster and longer. If you've got an investment in Nikon glass and you're after a model with a DX (APS-C) image sensor the D7200 is a solid option. But if you're not married to a system, there are stronger options out there for capturing fast-moving action. Design and FeaturesThe D7200 ($1,290.00 at Amazon) doesn't stray from the classic SLR form factor. It measures 4.2 by 5.3 by 3 inches (HWD) and wei...
The D7200 is the most serious D-SLR in Nikon's DX lineup, but it doesn't equal our Editors' Choice Canon 7D Mark II for capturing action.
51-point autofocus system; Dual SD card slots; Pentaprism viewfinder; Excellent control scheme; 1.3x crop mode available; Quick to turn on; Optional battery grip available; Crisp rear LCD; Sensor design omits optical low-pass filter; Very strong high ISO image quality; 1/250-second flash sync and 1/8,000-second shutter; Solid video feature set; In-camera Wi-Fi and NFC
6fps burst rate is slowest in class; Tops out at 5fps with limited buffer when shooting in Raw; Omits PC sync socket
Good low light performance; Lots of controls within easy reach; Sturdy build;
Quite large; Offers little in the way of cutting edge features;
Best-in-class image quality and sublime ergonomics took the Nikon D7200 to the top of the pack, but is it still as impressive?
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