Con motivo de la presentación por parte del supergurú Ken Rockwell de la nueva Nikon D7500 de la que solo os pondré los siempre interesantes apartados de: lo nuevo, lo bueno, lo malo, y lo que echa en falta, también nos pone un interesante recordatorio histórico de las DSLR que Nikon ha ido sacando en su historia digital, empezando por la Nikon D1, allá por el remoto 1999, hasta la flamante presentación de la D7500 en el año de su centenario y también del de su divorcio con Sony que tantas satisfacciones le dio mientras duró, el matrimonio, digo, no el divorcio.
New since the D7200
- 8 FPS, up from 6 FPS
- ISO 51,200, up from ISO 25,600
- Pushed ISO modes up to +5 stops, which look progressively worse until the +5 stop push (ISO 1,638,400) looks awful.
- Touch LCD
- Flipping LCD
- 4K Video
- Bluetooth
- New EN-EL15a battery, compatible with the older EN-EL15 used in every mid-sized Nikon from the D7000 up to the D500 and D810.
- 1.6 oz. (45g) lighter than the D7200.
- Group-area AF
- Only 20.6 MP, no longer 24 MP
Good:
- State-of-the-art DSLR image and speed performance at a very reasonable price; less than many lesser mirrorless cameras!
- Has a mode dial with programmable memories sorely lacking in the D500.
- Has an excellent built-in flash sorely lacking in the D500.
- Electronic video stabilization at 1,080p (none at 4K).
- Simultaneous 4K video output to card and uncompressed via HDMI.
- Headphone and microphone jacks.
Bad:
- Nothing really, this is a winner of a camera. Jo, tu, ¿ maletines o será verdad ?
Missing:
- No second card slot, so I’d not use the D7500 to shoot any critical jobs. Then again, I’ve been doing this for decades back when card errors were common; I haven’t lost any card files for over ten years so maybe we’re OK — feel lucky?
- No aperture-ring feeler, so no longer meters or auto exposes or records proper EXIF with any old manual-focus lenses. Who cares? Old manual focus lenses are for full-frame; DX lenses are much better on DX.
- Slightly fewer pixels in both the image sensor and LCD compared to the D7200, but not enough to notice.
- No GPS; use the GP-1A.
Y ya está. Ahora los enlaces prometidos: