Digital Camera World

Nikon D7500 £1,300/$1,500 (body only)

Source: 1 Surprisingly, the D7500 does not accept a battery grip.2 The touchscreen tilts up and down and has a resolution of 922k dots, slightly down on some current rivals.3 There’s only one SD card slot, which is a bit of a surprise given that the cameras on either side in the Nikon range have two.

SLR www.nikon.co.uk

4 The D7500 uses Nikon’s ‘enthusiast’ control layout, with a combined mode dial and drive mode dial.

SPECIFICATIONS

Sensor 20.9MP APS-C CMOS (23.5 x 15.7mm)

Focal length conversion on lens 1.5x

Memory SD/SDHC/SDXC (UHS-I)

Viewfinder Optical pentaprism, 100% coverage

Max video resolution 4K UHD 3,840 x 2,160

ISO range 100-51,200, expandable to 50-1,640,000

Autofocus 51-point phasedetection AF, 15 cross-type

Max burst rate 8fps

Screen Tilting 3.2-inch touchscreen, 922k dots

Shutter speeds 30-1/8,000 sec, Bulb

Weight 720g (body only, with battery and memory card)

Dimensions 136 x 104 x 73mm

Power supply EN-EL15a lithium-ion battery (supplied)

NIKON’S new DSLR for enthusiasts does not boast any dramatic new technologies, but the D7500 does fill a significant gap in the range.

It ?ts in towards the top of the Nikon DX (APS-C format) digital SLR range,where it’s designed to offer a balance between high-end performance, versatile features and an affordable price.

The D7500 slots in above the D7200, which is two years old but still quite contemporary in its technology. The D7200 uses a 24-megapixel sensor with no anti-aliasing filter for sharp, high-quality results, but it’s no longer Nikon’s latest imaging unit: that was ushered in with the Nikon D500 in 2016.

The D500 is a powerful, professional-level camera that can shot continuously at 10 frames per second with a big buffer capacity and a maximum expanded ISO of 1,640,000, both made possible

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