Nikon D7200

Parfois, il peut sembler que les décideurs DSLR n’ajoutent que des fonctionnalités lorsqu’ils en ont besoin, mais le Nikon D7200 possède une connectivité sans fil relativement récente. Il dispose d’une connexion Wi-Fi et d’une NFC pour créer des liens compatibles avec des téléphones compatibles.

Les caméras comme le Nikon D7200 ne sont pas destinées à vous attirer avec des extras incalculables, cependant, ou pour fournir le type de vitesse, les tireurs pro action sont après. Au lieu de cela, vous obtenez une vitesse quotidienne solide qui tombe légèrement en dessous de plusieurs CSC rivaux au prix, à ce stade.

Le côté du logiciel de la Wi-Fi Nikon D7200 permet également de nettoyer le sol avec celui de la plupart des autres fabricants. En plus de transférer des images et de contrôler le déclencheur à distance, vous pouvez modifier les paramètres de l’appareil photo comme l’ouverture, la vitesse d’obturation et l’ISO à partir de votre téléphone mobile ou de votre tablette. Pas mal, non?

Il y a aussi un petit flash pop-up, qui vous donne encore l’impression d’avoir tout ce dont vous avez besoin, en ajoutant à l’accessibilité du Nikon D7200.

 

 What is the Nikon D7200?

Le Nikon D7200 est un DSLR qui, bien qu’il ne fonctionne pas comme l’EOS 1200D, est raisonnablement abordable et offre un fonctionnement simple qui fera appel à ceux qui ne veulent pas aller au genou dans le côté manuel de la photographie. Il vous offre les avantages DSLR du choix des lentilles et une bonne qualité d’image, sans la courbe d’apprentissage intimidante.

Le processeur DIGIC 6 vous permet de tirer sur 5fps, ce qui est devenu le niveau de vitesse standard pour tous les DSLR actuels. C’est la même vitesse que le 700D. Ce qui a changé, c’est le tampon. La limite de fichier RAW à 8 images peut ne pas sembler impressionnante, mais être capable de prendre jusqu’à 940 images JPEG en rafale.

 

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Si vous êtes désireux de plonger directement dans certains des principes les plus avancés de la photographie, considérez également le Nikon D7200, qui a les mêmes entrées, mais plus de commandes manuelles.

Voulez-vous le simplifier? Le seul problème sérieux avec le Nikon D7200 est qu’il n’offre pas une gamme aussi dynamique que ses concurrents, le Nikon D5500 et le Pentax K-S2.

 

50D: Design and Handling

If jaw-dropping, dynamic style is high on your camera priority list, you’re unlikely to come to a DSLR for it. The Nikon D7200 has the classic DSLR look, with a chunky black body that most people will only be able to set apart from other entry-level models by looking at the name badge.

It’s practical, not a preener.

Being a lower-end model, the Nikon D7200’s outer parts are polycarbonate rather than magnesium alloy, which is only found on rather more expensive models. It doesn’t feel ultra-high-end, then, but its still tough.

There’s no creaking or warping of the parts that make up the Nikon D7200’s shell, and it has an aluminium skeleton underneath the plastic to help keep everything rigid. A slightly lower-end construction also helps keep the camera light.

It’s 25g lighter than its predecessor the Nikon D7200, and feels nicely low-heft for a DSLR

It’s 25g lighter than its predecessor the Nikon D7200, and feels nicely low-heft for a DSLR, without getting rid of the large hand grip. The next step would be to add weatherproofing to more affordable cameras like the Nikon D7200, but that’s not here yet. This is still reserved for Canon’s more expensive cameras.

A light, polycarbonate body camera may become a disadvantage if you’re looking to mount giant fast lenses, but if you want to sample some of Canon’s cheaper high-quality options like the bargain 50mm f1.8 lens, they’ll suit the Nikon D7200 perfectly.

What’s rather more specific to the Nikon D7200 is a very laid-back control style. It has just the single manual control wheel up on the top plate, and a very easy-to-reach mode dial.

 

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This style is a total opposite to the 750D’s brother, the Nikon D7200. That model is roughly £50 more and gets you more manual controls plus an extra display on the top plate, for a much more ‘pro’ feel.

If you think your next camera is likely to be a stepping stone onto more serious photography and, one day, a real top-end DSLR, the 760D is a much better bet. Think you’ll stay best friends with the Auto mode? There’s no shame in picking the Nikon D7200. By cutting down on the number of controls has been able to make the few that do feature very easy to access. This camera is easy to use, and — let’s not overstate the matter — does still give you plenty of manual control if you’re after it.

The mode dial features priority modes that let you control one main element such as aperture or shutter speed, letting the camera sort of the rest to best suit that setting. We use these easy manual modes about 90 per cent of the time.

Nikon D7200: Screen and EVF

The Nikon D7200 provides all the basics when it comes to previewing and reviewing your images. There’s a 3-inch vari-angle display on the back whose panel is the same found on the 700D. It’s a 1.04-million-dot Clear View II LCD, with a 3:2 aspect to match the camera’s sensor. Touchscreen support means you can pick your focus point with a finger when using Live View too.

Fitting in perfectly with the camera’s fairly easy style, the Nikon D7200 screen tilts out and up/down to make seeing what you’re shooting when holding the camera above or below your head easy. And at all sorts of odd angles. It’s a smooth, high-quality vari-angle mechanism.

 

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Unlike most DSLRs, there’s also not a huge performance penalty for using the LCD rather than the viewfinder to preview the image, called Live View in photography circles. As the Nikon D7200 uses on-sensor phase detection pixels rather than stepping right down to pure contrast detection software AF, it stays quick.

The one complaint we do have is about the viewfinder, not the screen. Being a cheaper model, it only offers 95 per cent coverage of the frame, meaning the shot will actually capture a bit more than you can see through the viewfinder. That’s the same coverage as the Nikon D5500, although the similarly-priced Pentax K-S2 manages 100 per cent coverage.

8.6 Total Score
Awesome

Nikon has taken their flagship D5 DSLR and most of its high-end features and distilled all of this into a smaller, but still very durable metal body. The full-frame sensor is replaced by an 20.9MP APS-C sized chip

Focus
9
Video quality
8
Lenses
9.5
Price
7
Design
9.5
POUR
  • Price
  • Good design
  • This is Canon - trusted manufacturer
  • Auto focus
  • Quality
  • Many lenses
CONTRE
  • Heavy
  • Default uquipment
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