Nikon D7200
The Nikon D7200 is a 24-megapixel APS-C digital single-lens reflex camera announced by Nikon on March 2, 2015. It started shipping on March 19. The D7200 was superseded by the Nikon D7500, announced on April 12, 2017.
Features
The D7200 is equipped with features intended for semi-professional use, which have been removed from the D7500. Being the successor of the Nikon D7100 it has the following enhancements:- An improved buffer size that at its highest frame rate can store eighteen raw images, whereas the D7100 can store six images.
- The optical CMOS sensor has been exchanged to a different model, which is not prone to generating faint striped patterns in night photography with strongly amplified dark tones.
- Sensor-related image quality measures have been determined to lead the APS-C camera class
- All 51 autofocus sensors have an improved performance at very low light scenes, with the effect of its light sensitivity being one exposure value better than the D7100. -3 EV allows for autofocusing in outdoor scenes only lit by the full Moon, or equivalently dark artificial light or candle light scenes.
- The electronic processor has been updated,.
- Power consumption has been lowered, so that a battery charge lasts for typical 1110 exposures, which is 160 more than the D7100 under the same conditions.
- Wi-Fi is now built-in, as is NFC, offering simpler smartphone connectivity.
- The layout of the shoulder display has been simplified. Its overall size is the same as before, but some secondary information has been removed in favor for tidiness and for important items to appear bigger.
- The back screen's visual interface has been changed slightly.
- A new picture processing mode, which does not change the original tone reproduction curve, has been adopted from higher-end models. This is to benefit RAW and JPEG photographers and videographers, who prefer to see histograms and preview images with high tone fidelity during shooting of scenes with a high dynamic range, and prefer to postpone any tonal adjustments to later post-processing.
- The maximum video quality mode has been improved to be non-interlaced, where the D7100 was interlaced.
The camera body shape has been left unchanged, in particular the deeper-grip update of other latest models such as the D5500 hasn't been adopted for the D7200.