Nikon D7200

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Nikon D7200
White balance
Yes
General
LCD screen3.2 inches with 1,228,800 dots
BatteryEN-EL15
Dimensions136 x 107 x 76 mm (5.35 x 4.21 x 2.99 inches)
Weight765 g including battery, 675 g body only
Made in Thailand
Chronology
PredecessorNikon D7100
SuccessorNikon D7500

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 The D7200 was superseded by the Nikon D7500, announced on April 12, 2017.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

Image zoom 1:1 quality test

The D7200 is equipped with features intended for semi-professional use (two SD card slots, the availability of a battery grip, and metering support for old manual focus Nikon AI type (Non-CPU) lenses[1]), which have been removed from the D7500. Being the successor of the Nikon D7100 it has (among other things) the following enhancements:[2][3]

Otherwise, it has also been described as "by no means a radical upgrade" compared to its predecessor, "yet it still adds some important features".[2]

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.

Gallery

  • Front view, body only
    Front view, body only
  • With AF-S DX Nikkor 18-105mm f/3.5-5.6G ED VR
    With AF-S DX Nikkor 18-105mm f/3.5-5.6G ED VR
  • Rear view
    Rear view

References

  1. ^ Nikon D7500 Ken Rockwell
  2. ^ a b Nikon D7200 Review: Digital Photography Review
  3. ^ "Nikon D7100 vs D7200, what's the difference?". Retrieved April 17, 2015.
  4. ^ "Nikon D7200: The new APS-C champ (dxomark.com)". Retrieved April 18, 2015.

External links