Nikon D200 10.2MP Digital SLR Camera with 18-70mm AF-S DX f/3.5-4.5G IF-ED Nikkor Zoom Lens
- 10.2-megapixel digital SLR camera captures images with professional-quality sharpness and color
- Large, eye-level optical viewfinder with 0.94x magnification for clear, precise compositions
- Rugged, lightweight magnesium alloy chassis and body protects technologies and mechanisms
- Shoots five frames-per-second and has fast SLR response with instant power-up, super-quick shutter release time and shortened viewfinder blackout time
- Large, 2.5-inch LCD monitor with wide angle viewing up to 170 degrees
Point And Shoot Digital Cameras Product Description
FASTER. SMARTER. STRONGER.Faster when it counts, rugged where it matters.10.2 megapixel DX Format CCD image sensor: A newly developed 10.2 effective megapixel DX Format CCD image sensor that captures images with edge-to-edge sharpness and incredible color at 3,872 x 2,592 pixels, yielding extraordinarily high-resolution images perfect for enlargements or creative cropping 18-70mm f3.5-4.5G ED-IF AF-S DX Zoom NikkorThis kit comes with an 18-70mm f3.5-4.5 Zoom Nikkor Lens.Industry-leading image processing for exceptional color performance: Incorporates Nikon’s industry-leading advanced imaging processing engine of the D2x, which allows color-independent pre-conditioning prior to A/D conversion to work in sympho… More >>
Nikon D200 10.2MP Digital SLR Camera with 18-70mm AF-S DX f/3.5-4.5G IF-ED Nikkor Zoom Lens
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12:43 pm on November 23rd, 2009
this is the 3rd product I’ve gotten that didn’t come on time and is not working. if I could give u guys a negative star I would!
Rating: 1 / 5
2:46 pm on November 23rd, 2009
I purchased this camera 2 months ago. It takes great pictures, however my sensors keep on getting dirty. I treat this camera like a baby, and only use it in environments where it won’t get damaged (in other words I don’t take it to the beach, and never use it if there is the possibility of it getting wet). The first time I noticed the sensors were dirty (a smudge appeared in the top left corner of all my photos), I immediately brought the camera to Nikon to have them cleaned. They cleaned the sensors, and now the smudge appears in the middle right of all my images. Nikon has refused to replace the camera, and I have to bring it back to their facility to be fixed (all at my own expense). In the meantime they won’t lend me a replacement camera (even though I need this for my business). Before purchasing this camera I was debating between Nikon and Canon, and got the D200 at a decent price. I have a Canon video camera, and have found their technical support and service to be vastly superior. If I could do it all again, I would go with Canon. They’re basically the same quality, however Canon has much better customer service.
Rating: 1 / 5
3:47 pm on November 23rd, 2009
Nikon’s list price for this body is $1399.95 How Amazon came up with a list price of $1849.00 is anybody’s wild guess.
Rating: 5 / 5
6:33 pm on November 23rd, 2009
Very fast delivery, tip top condition. When they say overnight delivery, you can count on it.
Rating: 5 / 5
6:42 pm on November 23rd, 2009
I posted one review regarding this camera in which I gave the camera two stars because of its tendency to consistently underexpose full green auto mode flash photos. However, after 3 emails to Nikon’s tech support, I’ve changed my mind. First of all, please allow me to say that Nikon’s tech support is top notch. Technician David D was great. He was very patient with me, an amateur photographer when it comes to digital SLRs, and he explained things in a way I could understand completely.
If you are a snapshot photographer who wants a nice camera to be able to point and shoot without worrying about attempting to create perfect photographs by fussing with settings, quite frankly, the Nikon D80 isn’t the camera you want. Get yourself a quality point and shoot camera that will take acceptable snapshots. If, on the other hand, your goal is to create beautiful, near professional quality digital photographs by adjusting and tweaking camera settings, then this camera is an excellent camera for you. The features that this camera comes loaded down with gives you such tremendous control that, if you take the time to learn this camera, you will be able to take detail perfect photographs that will make you proud, along with being glad that you bought a Nikon D80 camera.
The camera does indeed underexpose flash photos taken in the full auto mode so that they appear dark. However, Nikon has set up its metering system to do this for a reason, as Nikon’s technician, David D explained to me. The D80 automatically assumes that you, the photographer, will, most likely, desire to edit the photos you take, in some form or fashion. Nikon was very perceptive about digital photographers to figure things this way, actually. Even with point and shoot photographers, including myself, whenever photos are uploaded from digital cameras to computers, most of those photos are cropped, enhanced, red eye eliminated, etc. In a slightly underexposed digital photograph, all the data and detail is there. That photograph can then be edited, if you so desire, and, since you started with a photo that contained all its data and detail, you can produce a great picture. However, an overexposed digital photograph will lose data and detail. The data and detail lost in an overexposed digital photograph can’t be restored by any amount of editing. The D80 will give you a slightly underexposed photograph out of the camera so that you will have all the data and detail in that photograph, as opposed to a slightly overexposed photo with lost data and detail. You can then edit that slightly underexposed photo, if you desire to do so, and you will have a photo with all its data and detail to work with. This can’t be said for a slightly overexposed digital photograph, which will have lost some data and detail.
Nikon technician David D suggested to me that if I didn’t mind losing a bit of the data and detail in my photographs, that I could either do some photo editing with photo editing software and brighten them up, or, using the D80′s exposure compensation feature, I could set the camera to add a little exposure to each photograph it takes.
If you’re going to use a Nikon D80 camera, you have to think more like a photographer than like a tourist taking vacation photos. It’s a great camera if you understand it and know how to use it.
Rating: 4 / 5