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Photography Q&A
Upgrade from D7000 - D7200 vs D500?
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<blockquote data-quote="Bikerbrent_RIP" data-source="post: 622811" data-attributes="member: 42081"><p>The high ISO performance of the D500 over the D7200 is very small, about 1/2 f-stop at most. Plus, for portraits and events the increase in number of pixels for the D7200 is a small, but significant advantage. Also, don't forget with you will also be forced to carry your flash with you at all times, and invest in some sort of flash remote trigger if you want to shoot flash off camera. The design of the D500 is heavily slanted towards sports/action, but since you aren't interested in this, save some money and get a D7200. And one final though, the learning curve to move from the D7000 to D7200 is a lot less than moving to the D500. Plus, since you want to use the D7000 as backup, the switch from the D7200 would be almost seamless whereas the switch from D500 to D7000 would be major in a backup, high pressure situation such as a wedding.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bikerbrent_RIP, post: 622811, member: 42081"] The high ISO performance of the D500 over the D7200 is very small, about 1/2 f-stop at most. Plus, for portraits and events the increase in number of pixels for the D7200 is a small, but significant advantage. Also, don't forget with you will also be forced to carry your flash with you at all times, and invest in some sort of flash remote trigger if you want to shoot flash off camera. The design of the D500 is heavily slanted towards sports/action, but since you aren't interested in this, save some money and get a D7200. And one final though, the learning curve to move from the D7000 to D7200 is a lot less than moving to the D500. Plus, since you want to use the D7000 as backup, the switch from the D7200 would be almost seamless whereas the switch from D500 to D7000 would be major in a backup, high pressure situation such as a wedding. [/QUOTE]
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Photography Q&A
Upgrade from D7000 - D7200 vs D500?
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