In case you somehow missed it (or if you skipped ahead), the Nikon D7200 is an excellent camera. It produces still images that compete with or are better than any other APS-C camera on the market. The low light performance of this camera is top notch and...
Published: 2015-08-11, Author: George , review by: shutterbug.com
Abstract: The Nikon D7200 is the new flagship of Nikon's DX camera line (APS-C-sized sensor). The camera offers 24MP resolution, has a very fast and reliable AF system, and showed an excellent overall performance in our tests. The Nikon D7200 will seem quite fami...
WiFi and NFC, similar design to fullframe lineup, excellent battery life, expanded buffer, improved lowlight focusing
Fixed display, slow continuous shooting mode, no realtime exposure preview, no focus peaking
Between the improved ISO, more generous buffer, better low-light focusing and better battery life, we think that with the D7200, Nikon gave D7100 owners enough reason to upgrade. For Nikon shooters, the D7200 is a compelling crop-sensor camera to use alon...
Published: 2015-06-03, Author: Richard , review by: dpreview.com
Best-yet APS-C image quality: good JPEGs and extensive Raw dynamic range, Class-leading low-light performance, Impressive AF subject tracking performance through the viewfinder, All AF points continue to work down to -3EV, Wide AF area with dense 51-point
No control of aperture in movie or live view modes, Lack of peripheral cross-type AF points, 6fps Raw only available in 12-bit, which sacrifices some dynamic range, No representation of exposure in live view, Movie autofocus is too fast and jumpy, Live vi
The D7200 is a gentle refresh of a very good camera. The sensor is a little better, the autofocus works in lower light and the continuous shooting buffer lets you make use of its excellent AF tracking. The slow live view autofocus and awkward lack of aper...
Very good resolution, little noise and extremely high dynamic range, Solidly built, beautifully finished, Very complete in terms of execution and options (NFC), Fast continuous mode, a large buffer, long series are possible, High-quality video, More user-
No folding screen, Not inexpensive, but it is worth the money, No GPS
Rather than completely changing the design and way the D7200 works, Nikon has made a few incremental upgrades which tweaks the camera to make it even more appealing than its predecessor (which was also pretty great). It's designed for enthusiasts, which...
Abstract: The Nikon D7200 is Nikon's best DX camera, replacing the old D7100, which replaced the older D7000 from 2010.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 l...
Published: 2015-04-10, Author: Paul , review by: dxomark.com
Abstract: Nikon's latest flagship DX-format DSLR, the D7200, features a 24.2Mp APS-C image sensor and weather-resistant shell, as well as an improved autofocus and image buffer capabilities. Using the same or similar APS-C sensor previously tested in their D3300 en...