Superb handling ; Great performance ; Great image quality;
Quite big and heavy ; No in-body stabilisation ; No 4K video;
Superb handling ; Great performance ; Great image quality;
Quite big and heavy ; No in-body stabilisation ; No 4K video;
The Nikon D750 is a no-compromise full-frame SLR that's better priced than ever
Superb handling ; Great performance ; Great image quality;
Quite big and heavy ; No in-body stabilisation ; No 4K video;
This is one of my favorite camera bodies we currently have in the store. It's a full frame camera that includes an articulated screen that makes video recording at odd angles much easier. There have been issues in the past with the sensor but they have all since been resolved according to Nikon.
Nikon finds the missing link between pro and consumer DSLRs with new D750.
The Nikon D750 is a full-frame DSLR that provides not only excellent image quality and performance, but also best-in-class features and design. For this reason, the D750 is one of the best cameras available for professionals and enthusiasts alike.
This camera provides excellent image quality without sacrificing features
A maximum shutter speed of 1/4000s limits your aperture settings when shooting in bright light
Simply put, with its strong performance and high-quality photos and videos, the Nikon D750 is one of the best DSLRs we have ever tested.
Beautiful full-frame stills; Excellent 1080/60p movies; Speedy response
Expensive; Shutter speed tops out at 1/4,000; Underexposes some scenes
The camera market is changing and the Nikon D750 is the epitome of that. A full-frame DSLR with a tilt-angle screen? People wouldn't have even considered that not so many years ago because the technology just wasn't nearly up to it. So why now?
Battery life is; highly responsive (shutter is super-reactive); decent image quality (settings specific); tilt-angle screen opens some shooting opportunities; dual SD card slots; Wi-Fi
JPEG processing a little aggressive; live view focus speed/pinpoint accuracy may make tilt-angle screen questionable; small top LCD panel; some Wi-Fi app functionality issues
The Nikon D750 is a full-frame DSLR for the kind of photographer who wants a camera one step down from the pro models. You get the low-light flexibility that comes with a full-frame sensor, and some features generally left out of the top models – all without some of the extra cost of the top dogs.
Excellent AF performance; Great image quality; Solid handling
Misses some manual control features of the D810
The Nikon D750 ($2,299.95) is the company's second real effort at making an affordable full-frame D-SLR. It's only $300 more than the D610 , but it's much more capable. The D750 uses a 24-megapixel image sensor, but its autofocus system, video recording capabilities, and build quality are equal to...
24-megapixel full-frame image sensor; 6.5fps burst shooting; Solid high ISO performance; Fast 51fps autofocus system; 1080p60 video capture; Intervalometer and time lapse functions; Dual card slots; Tilting rear display; Loads of physical controls; Uncompressed video output via HDMI.
Sensor includes optical low-pass filter; Time lapse limited to 8 hours; GPS module is a pricey add-on; Wi-Fi remote function needs improvement; No PC sync socket
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