Testseek.fr ont rassemblé 130 examens experts du Nikon D5200 et l'estimation moyenne est 80%. Faites descendre l'écran et voyez les toutes les revues pour Nikon D5200.
April 2013
(80%)
130 Avis
Note moyenne issue des avis d’experts sur ce produit.
Utilisateurs
(93%)
106 Avis
Note moyenne délivrée par les utilisateurs du produit.
800100130
Les éditeurs ont aimé
Nouveau capteur de 24 millions de pixels
Construction soignée et écran monté sur rotule
Bonne gestion du bruit jusqu'à 3200 ISO
Illustrations d'aides bienvenues
Implémentation du son stéréo pour la vidéo
Définition du capteur
Qualité d'image
Gestion des hautes sensibilités jusqu'à 3200iso
Interface complète
Les éditeurs n'ont pas aimé
Autofocus en LiveView toujours trop lent
Apparition de "rolling shutter" en vidéo
Ergonomie perfectible avec des choix parfois incohérents
Peu d'évolutions par rapport au D5100
Aspect tout plastique
Ergonomie
AF manque de vélocité en basse lumière
Vidéo en 50i seulement
Manque d'audace général du produit par rapport à la concurrence
The Nikon D5200 is ideal for anyone wanting their first good-quality DSLR or wanting to upgrade from their current mid-range DSLR. The Nikon D5200 is well-built, comfortable and easy to use with good picture quality and provides good value for money. The...
The Nikon D5200 is an interesting camera, placed in the crossover between beginner and enthusiast level. Some people would say that its plastic body and simple handling are likely to frustrate the enthusiast, while its memory-hungry resolution (and theref...
Good picture quality, vari-angle LCD screen, decent autofocus system with motorised lenses
Experienced sharpness issues with first review sample body (not confirmed as an official, recognised issue as yet), banding in shadow areas when pushing raw file EV, poor movie clips with terrible interlaced tearing in playback, no touchscreen, lack of qu
For its £720 price tag, the Nikon D5200 draws in the D7000's autofocus system and, considering that and the new 24-megapixel sensor's overall image quality, it's a DSLR that's a step beyond its predecessor. But it's not totally plain sailing. As en...
Impressive 39-point AF system, Continuous shooting speed of 5fps, Stunning image quality, Intuitive graphic user interface
Slow AF point positioning in Live View, Lags when previewing creative effects in real time, Noisy kit lens performance
Costing £649 body only, or £719 with the 18-55mm VR kit lens, the D5200 currently costs around £320 more than the equivalent D5100 package. The developments to the D5200's internal specification – most notably the 39-point AF system and 24.1MP sensor – re...
New 24Megapixel sensor, Quality build with pivoting screen, Low image noise up to 3200 ISO, Helpful illustrations, Stereo recording in video mode
AF in LiveView still too slow, Rolling shutter in video mode, Menu interface could be improved with clearer, more coherent choices, Not very different from the D5100
The Nikon D5200 is all about transitions: bridging the gap between an entry-level and a mid-range SLR, it's a technological transition to a new Toshiba-made sensor. Bringing little more to its predecessor, the D5100, than the addition of 8 Megapixels, the...
No touchscreen; Undercut by close competitors; Slightly laggy focusing
With excellent low light performance, reliable results and speedy access to the most common settings, the D5200 makes it easy to make the most of your photography, whatever the conditions. Focusing could be a little faster, but other than that it's a g...
High, res sensor, Proven AF system, Articulating screen, Good interface
Special Effect JPEG only, No touchscreen, Few direct controls
The Nikon D5200 is a solid performer that delivers images with well-controlled noise and plenty of detail, albeit with slight banding in some images taken at IS0 3200 and above. It's also a nicely constructed camera, and the limited number of buttons and...
Fast Autofocus, Great image quality, 39-point Autofocus system
Screen lacks touch capability,
The D5200 is an affordable DSLR camera that you can have fun with, and a decent one to pick for your family photos and vacations. As it has been in the market for close to 7 years now, the camera is affordable priced, and will not leave a huge hole in you...
By Eric Butterfield The Nikon D5200 is a powerful entry-level DSLR that is well suited for beginners and offers plenty of features for more advanced photographers. It offers a lot of controls and customization abilities so you can tailor it to your sty...
Publié: 2013-06-27, Auteur: Petar , review by: insidehw.com
Extrait: After the development of high-end models during the start of the last year, Nikon spent the other half of the year (and the beginning of 2013.) developing new entry and mid-level models. New generation of presented models consists of the D3200 model at th...