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What do you think about Nikon D7200

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4.6
76 reviews
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Photo answers
★★★★★
9 years ago

The D7200 is a great top-spec enthusiast D-SLR, but it's difficult to envisage many owners of the D7100 rushing out in their droves to upgrade. But if you're coming in fresh to the market, it's worth paying the extra £190 to get this latest model. The new processor makes the biggest difference.

DP Review
★★★★★
9 years ago

One of our favorite DSLRs in the past few years is the Nikon D7100, which was introduced way back in February 2013. The D7200 isn't a radical upgrade by any means, yet it still adds some important features, most notably a larger buffer, improved autofocus performance in low light, 60p video, Wi-Fi...

expertreviews.co.uk
★★★★★
9 years ago
Nikon D7200 review - hands on

The D7100 has been Nikon's enthusiast-level camera of choice for the past few years, but it was beginning to show its age in terms of connectivity, even in a field where manufacturers prefer to focus on pixel counts and burst speeds than Wi-Fi.

PhotoRadar
★★★★★
9 years ago

Roughly two years have elapsed between the introduction of the D7100 and the arrival of its successor, and on the surface the new D7200 seems more like an incremental update than a major overhaul.

Wi-Fi built in; 24.2MP AA-filterless sensor; Sturdy body

Fixed screen; Screen not touch sensitive; Highest sensitivity setting JPEG only

TechRadar UK
★★★★★
9 years ago
Nikon D7200 review

Roughly two years have elapsed between the introduction of the Nikon D7100 and the arrival of its successor, and on the surface the new D7200 seems more like an incremental update than a major overhaul.

digitalcameraworld.com
★★★★★
9 years ago

Nikon D7200 review video: on the face of it the Nikon D7200 brings few major changes from the D7100. Externally, it's identical, with the same dimensions, weight, rear screen and viewfinder.

Amateur Photographer
★★★★
9 years ago
Nikon D7200 Review

The D7000 series of cameras, to which this new model belongs, is Nikon's APS-C-sensor flagship. Boasting a superb feature set for the enthusiast photographer, this range is the crème de la crème from the Nikon stable.

Has lots of control buttons making it quick to change settings; Quick AF system with a total of 51 points; Built-in NFC connectivity for sharing with a smartphone or tablet

No touchscreen/articulation like others in the Nikon range; No change in body design over the Nikon D7100

What Digital Camera
★★★★
9 years ago
Nikon D7200 Review

Nikon D7200 Review - The D7200 is Nikon's latest DSLR, and it's aimed at being their best APS-C model to date. Does it succeed? Read on to find out...

Addition of NFC connectivity aids one-touch image sharing and smartphone connection; Wide range of control buttons aid customisation; AF system impresses thanks to 51 points

Changes in design of the camera body are sadly lacking; LCD screen somewhat underspecified and lacking in any kind of articulation of touch functionality

Neocamera
★★★
★★
9 years ago
Nikon D7200

The D7200 is the new Nikon APS-C flagship. It combines a refined 24 MP sensor with class-leading native ISO range and fast processor to deliver great image-quality and speedy performance. This is a sturdy professional DSLR with efficient controls for both stills and video.

Superb control over image nose; Good color-accuracy after tweaking; Stellar dynamic range; Ultra-sensitive AF; Nearly instant black-out; Exceptionally fast and responsive; Manual focus assist direction indicator; Excellent build quality

Frequent and severe over-exposure; AWB not perfect under artificial light; Bizarre Auto ISO; Indistinct ISO button; Very poor live-view; Noise-Reduction forced at ISO 800; Lens correction slow down camera; Level difficult to see

Ken Rockwell
★★★★★
9 years ago
Nikon D7200 Review

Honestly, all of these three cameras are pretty much the same and all are fantastic, and the older models sell for less: the D7000 sells new for less than $600 and the only real difference is that the viewfinder digits are green, not white.

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