Nikon's HDSLR system is endlessly expandable. From legendary NIKKOR lenses and Nikon Speedlights for endless creative expression, your system can grow with you.
Nikon's HDSLR system is endlessly expandable. From legendary NIKKOR lenses and Nikon Speedlights for endless creative expression, your system can grow with you.
A terrific camera! It has everything you could wish for. Fast and precise autofocus. You can push the ISO rate is soaring and the pictures are still really good. A cannon product! Better get there with DX sensor!
The Nikon D7200 makes the 2-year-old D7100 look like a terrific deal. With only minor improvements over its predecessor, the D7200 remains a great camera, but given the D7100's lower price, the D7200 is a tough sell unless you're a night owl or long burst shooter. Once the D7100 evaporates from the market -- or the price stops dropping and starts rising -- then the D7200 will seem more compelling. It's the same pattern the D7100 faced over the D7000 before it.
The Nikon D7200 is a great camera for the money, as long as you don't care about an extensive feature set.
Great photo quality; solid performance and a sturdy body are the Nikon D7200's highlights.
Subpar wireless implementation and a fixed LCD display.
It's been a couple of years since the Nikon D7100 ($899.00 at Amazon) wowed us with its image quality and performance. Its successor, the D7200 ($1,199.95, body only), offers modest upgrades, including a larger shooting buffer and built-in Wi-Fi, but despite these improvements, we're not rating it quite as high as the D7100. The reason is simple: stiffer competition. Cameras like the Pentax K-3 and K-3 II, the Sony Alpha 77 II, the Samsung NX1 ( at Amazon) , and our Editors' Choice, the Canon EOS 7D Mark II ($1,499.00 at Dell) , also capture images with excellent quality, but shoot faster and longer. If you've got an investment in Nikon glass and you're after a model with a DX (APS-C) image sensor the D7200 is a solid option. But if you're not married to a system, there are stronger options out there for capturing fast-moving action. Design and FeaturesThe D7200 ($1,290.00 at Amazon) doesn't stray from the classic SLR form factor. It measures 4.2 by 5.3 by 3 inches (HWD) and wei...
The D7200 is the most serious D-SLR in Nikon's DX lineup, but it doesn't equal our Editors' Choice Canon 7D Mark II for capturing action.
51-point autofocus system; Dual SD card slots; Pentaprism viewfinder; Excellent control scheme; 1.3x crop mode available; Quick to turn on; Optional battery grip available; Crisp rear LCD; Sensor design omits optical low-pass filter; Very strong high ISO image quality; 1/250-second flash sync and 1/8,000-second shutter; Solid video feature set; In-camera Wi-Fi and NFC
6fps burst rate is slowest in class; Tops out at 5fps with limited buffer when shooting in Raw; Omits PC sync socket
Good low light performance; Lots of controls within easy reach; Sturdy build;
Quite large; Offers little in the way of cutting edge features;
Best-in-class image quality and sublime ergonomics took the Nikon D7200 to the top of the pack, but is it still as impressive?
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