Lo hace ahora y nos lo cuenta a todos con sus inevitables imágenes XXXXXXXL.
Como de esta maquinita ya lo sabemos todo, menos la respuesta a la pregunta del millón con la que nadie se ha atrevido: ¿ vale la pena salir corriendo a por una D7200 mientras aún existan ?, os voy a dejar con los apartados habituales para esta WEB.
Eso si, me veo en la tristísima obligación de comunicaros que para la prueba de la secuencia a todos los ISO’s el bueno de Ken ha cambiado de escenario y aunque también es un «hogar» y tiene un reloj, no se parece en nada al anterior de madera noble.
Bueno, la cosa tiene el morbo de ver una imagen a 1.638.400 ISO, cosa que aunque no sirva para nada no es nada habitual y confío que a nadie se le ocurra probar, pero es divertido.
Bueno, y ya me callo. Esto es lo que normalmente pongo en los análisis de Ken.
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, and much lighter than a D850.
- Group-area AF.
- Only 20.6 MP, no longer 24 MP.
- No more second card slot.
- No longer meters with old manual-focus lenses.
Good
- The images always look great. In competent hands, they’re always sharp and in-focus with great colors and exposure.
- State-of-the-art DSLR image and speed performance at a very reasonable price; less than many lesser mirrorless cameras!
- Excellent autofocus system with great facial recognition.
- 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
- Several important features that I actually use on my older D7200 have been removed: there is no second card slot, there is no depth-of-field preview button (and no way to program one), and there is no aperture-ring feeler so no metering or auto exposure with old manual-focus lenses.
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 Depth-of-Field Preview through the viewfinder. To see it, you now either have to use Live View or playback the image.
- 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 option for a battery grip.
- No square or 4:3 crops, only a 1.3x (12x18mm) as-shot crop option.
- No automatic brightness control for the rear LCD. No other Nikons do this, either.
- While Nikon claims this has the same sensor and image processing of the D500, the AUTO 0 (Keep White) option is missing for Auto White Balance. The D7500 makes do with just the AUTO 1 and AUTO 2 options.
- No GPS; use the GP-1A or just the Snapbridge app to read location data from your phone for free.
Todo lo demás lo veréis en el análisis completo