coastalconn
Been spending a lot of time on here!
- Joined
- Mar 24, 2012
- Messages
- 3,594
- Reaction score
- 3,635
- Location
- Old Saybrook, CT
- Can others edit my Photos
- Photos NOT OK to edit
If you were starting out now, you would probably not even be looking at the D7200, probably a d3k/5k series. The D500 is clearly not made for someone starting out. It is a very specific set of specs that are geared towards me to make me switch backWell here is the problem Derrel, cameras like the D7200 is already an excellent camera, its got top notch AF system, bigger buffer, 6 or 7FPS (depends of mode) and amazing sensor, I think many people who shoot wildlife and sports can get most of what they want with this camera which cost about half what the D500 does.
Sure if you shoot only sports or wildlife and maybe even get paid then the D500 is right for you but not a lot of people are so committed.
For the average shooter this camera will be a huge waste of money.
If I was only starting photography now I would rather get the D7200 and spend 1000$ on lenses then get the D500 with a basic kit lens.

Technically the D7200 is only 5 FPS in 14 bit raw. People that shoot what I do would easily pay the premium for twice the speed and 8x the buffer. Hell Auto AF fine tune would be worth it to me with the amount of time I spend testing/calibrating/confirming fine tune.
Ironically I got so many great images with the D7100 and the tiny buffer of those Osprey series. Even the Osprey series don't need that big of a buffer. I can only think of a few times I would have wanted a 10 second buffer like when and Osprey dives and grab a fish and all of a sudden an Eagle or Gull appears out of no where and grabs the fish from an Osprey.There's always a segment of people who want to be on the cutting edge. I think the 200-frame RAW buffer, in 14-bit capture mode, could be a huge positive for people who want to keep shooting when important action actually is happening in front of the camera...coastalconn's osprey dives, fish-capture action, and then subsequent take-off and fly-off with the captured fish: there's a really great example of when a 200-frame, full bit depth buffer (200 shots!) could be of HUGE value.
Oh, and the Hawks from this thread George Jr. was really showing off today. | Photography Forum (the first 5) Really only needed a second or two of buffer and those are the shots that you are much less likely to get on a D7200 because it is all about 10 frames in that second. of course just my humble opinion