I stopped the car with the 300mm PF
I'd have used the brakes Bill... I stopped the car with the 300mm PF ...
I'd have used the brakes Bill
Image looks good for ISO1600![]()
Yep, the D7200 is good for general stuff, (most of what maybe other people take), at high ISO ............ but I still cannot sort out small bird crops at anything over ISO400/ISO800 ....... they are just hit or miss noise-wise, generally a big miss for me
Chaffinch by WillWA, on Flickr
Greater Spotted Woodpecker by WillWA, on Flickr
Black Bird by WillWA, on FlickrHi,
I am finding the noise on the D7200 on big crops acceptable, it's not great but is ok as long as you don't pixel peep. I do find that you have to use noise reduction in post processing though. These shots range from ISO 4000- 6400... D7200 with Sigma 150-600. All at 600mm f8. All fairly heavy crops and all with the all important noise reduction applied...
Chaffinch by WillWA, on Flickr
Greater Spotted Woodpecker by WillWA, on Flickr
Black Bird by WillWA, on Flickr
I think that it depends on the light and background - sometimes it's OK many times I find it noisy
what I would also say, as before the D7200 I had a D7100 and a D7000 ....... as far as acceptable noise is concerned on crops of bird shots at higher ISO's I do not see any improvement in the D7200 over the D7100
I think that it depends on the light and background - sometimes it's OK many times I find it noisy
what I would also say, as before the D7200 I had a D7100 and a D7000 ....... as far as acceptable noise is concerned on crops of bird shots at higher ISO's I do not see any improvement in the D7200 over the D7100, which I suppose surprised me. I do use the DX Body quite a lot and I can see that the D7200 is fast and good ...... most of my shots are taken using single cell focus
Curlew_Noise by Chris Cotton, on FlickrI've got a 7000 and may consider a 7200 at some point. Will probably wait until the D500 comes out and see if there's any bargains available on the 7200.I went D7000, D7100 and then D7200. The jump from 7000 to 7100 left me disappointed but I find the D7200 much better - really think Nikon should have completely skipped the 7100.
Very happy with results from the 7200 and don't think I'll change any time soon (can't justify a D500 unfortunately).
Which sigma lens? C or S?Hi,
I am finding the noise on the D7200 on big crops acceptable, it's not great but is ok as long as you don't pixel peep. I do find that you have to use noise reduction in post processing though. These shots range from ISO 4000- 6400... D7200 with Sigma 150-600. All at 600mm f8. All fairly heavy crops and all with the all important noise reduction applied...
Chaffinch by WillWA, on Flickr
Greater Spotted Woodpecker by WillWA, on Flickr
Black Bird by WillWA, on Flickr
Hi,
I am finding the noise on the D7200 on big crops acceptable, it's not great but is ok as long as you don't pixel peep. I do find that you have to use noise reduction in post processing though. These shots range from ISO 4000- 6400... D7200 with Sigma 150-600. All at 600mm f8. All fairly heavy crops and all with the all important noise reduction applied...
Chaffinch by WillWA, on Flickr
Greater Spotted Woodpecker by WillWA, on Flickr
Black Bird by WillWA, on Flickr
That's exactly the same as I feel. Having come from the d7000 to d7200, I'm noticing very little if any improvement on noise at anything above say 400 ISO. It's really disappointed me and I'm thinking I'll either get the d500 when it comes out (depending on noise levels) or maybe a d810/d850 (if that really is coming out this year) and crop to get the 1.5x crop factor back.
@WWA your shots look good and you're right there's little noise there, but it looks like these are relatively close and not huge crops as you've said. This was a 100% crop and you can see that there's a lot of noise in both background and bird. Of course I can use NR but that reduces feather detail which is something I don't want. If you're happy with it coming from a cheaper body that's goodbut to me (and evidently Bill) it's just not good enough.
Curlew_Noise by Chris Cotton, on Flickr
That's definitely the right idea, there will be a few that jump and sell their d7200. For me a used d7200 for £400 (that's possible as that's what I recently paid for a used one) is an absolute bargain compared to £1700 for the d500 when the d7200 will be plenty for many. That's more than enough left over for a used 70-200 f2.8 VR2!I've got a 7000 and may consider a 7200 at some point. Will probably wait until the D500 comes out and see if there's any bargains available on the 7200.
I would think that the D500 will be a great camera, I had the D300 and was very happy with that when it came out, waited years for the D400 but it never came out,the D7000 wasn't a good replacement in my views, a good cameraI've got a 7000 and may consider a 7200 at some point. Will probably wait until the D500 comes out and see if there's any bargains available on the 7200.
I think it will deliver and be a worthwhile upgrade for d300 users, but I do wonder if d7100/d7200 users will see as much an upgrade other than AF and buffer.I would think that the D500 will be a great camera, I had the D300 and was very happy with that when it came out, waited years for the D400 but it never came out,the D7000 wasn't a good replacement in my views, a good camera
but not a D400, so its about time we had the 500, just hope it delivers the goods..
I would think, that when the D400 never came, a lot jumped ship,i had a little tipple but didn't like the layout of canon or feel of the camera..perhaps this will tempt them back?I think it will deliver and be a worthwhile upgrade for d300 users, but I do wonder if d7100/d7200 users will see as much an upgrade other than AF and buffer.
I know what you mean. I had an Olympus Pen for a while. Just too small and fiddly, but not small enough to be a compact camera. Got myself a brand new D7000 for a bargain price last year. Lovely camera and the right size for my fat fingers.Well looks like I am back to being a D7000 owner! Tried a Panasonic G6 for a year as the idea of less weight and more inconspicuous body of 4/3rds system too my fancy but no matter how much I tried I just couldn't get on with the smaller body, it just felt like a toy in my hands and was forever hitting buttons and adjusting things by accident ruining my photo's.
Ordered myself a used Nikon 16-85mm DX lens as well. Just need to wait for payday to get a new tripod and a circular polariser filter
I had a G3 and sold it for the same reason, and bought a 7000Well looks like I am back to being a D7000 owner! Tried a Panasonic G6 for a year as the idea of less weight and more inconspicuous body of 4/3rds system too my fancy but no matter how much I tried I just couldn't get on with the smaller body, it just felt like a toy in my hands and was forever hitting buttons and adjusting things by accident ruining my photo's.
Ordered myself a used Nikon 16-85mm DX lens as well. Just need to wait for payday to get a new tripod and a circular polariser filter
Did you get the contemporary or sport version?Well i purchased the Tamron 70-300 but realised that 300 on FF isn't quite long enough for what i need. Hopefully 600mm will see me right.
How do you like it?The contemporary
The thing is you are not comparing similar situations. The photos by WWA although high ISO due to the high shutter speed and f8 aperture look like they are taken in ok light (and a good example why iso6400 isn't so bad on a d7200 in the right light) and close, whereas htid curlew looks to be in poor light and a heavy crop due to distance. In good light I would expect you could push ISO to 6400, I did on the d7100, I've not yet had time to really test the d7200 but I expect it will perform as well as the d7000/d7100. I would only expect there to be a 1/3 stop improvement max between the d7000-d7200, the improvements are in other areas rather than the sensor technology. These are model upgrades rather than completely new models like the change from d90 to d7xxx and d700 to d800. The difference in ISO performance between dx and fx is I think around one stop. When the d500 is out I really don't expect much ISO improvement over the d7200, I think some will be disappointed.
If you want great ISO performance in low light then full frame is the way and also don't crop. A few months ago I was on a hedgehog workshop with my d750 where like was poor, I was shooting at f2.8-4, 1/200 and iso3200 all day. The light was pushing the d750 so there wasn't the possibility to crop. One thing I learn a year ago is you can't expect great detail if you are not close to the subject. Since working this out my images have improved.
Maybe I'm expecting too much then as I want to be able to heavily crop in not great light and have virtually no noise. I accept that the d500 probably won't be what I want it to be which is why I said maybe I'll look at a d810 or d850 if that really is coming out (rather than just rumours).
Trouble is yoh can't always get close enough to a subject. A lot of the time my only chance to get out anywhere is to go to reserves where there are hides so I'm stuck with the distance the birds are from me. Of course I could get a 600mm lens with tc and increase that way but an f4 version is way above my price range so I'm stuck with what I have.
The D750 will do what you want, and the D810
ideally the D750 with more FPS and a better buffer would fit the bill
Maybe I'm expecting too much then as I want to be able to heavily crop in not great light and have virtually no noise. I accept that the d500 probably won't be what I want it to be which is why I said maybe I'll look at a d810 or d850 if that really is coming out (rather than just rumours).
Trouble is yoh can't always get close enough to a subject. A lot of the time my only chance to get out anywhere is to go to reserves where there are hides so I'm stuck with the distance the birds are from me. Of course I could get a 600mm lens with tc and increase that way but an f4 version is way above my price range so I'm stuck with what I have.
Instead of looking at what you can't do with your camera, have a think about what you could do. Local parks are great, plenty of squirrels for even wide angles, if there is a pond I'm sure there will be ducks or maybe herons. These modern high MP cameras may seem the answer but they won't really get you closer as you have found with cropping the d7200.Except the d750 has about the same MP as the d7200 but without the 1.5 crop :/ the d810 is nearly good enough as in 1.5 crop it's down to 15mp but that's worse than the d7200. I'm hoping that if a d850 comes out with a 50mp sensor I'd still be able to crop to about 24mp with the 1.5 factor. But I'm dreaming, as if I can afford the d850 if it does come out!
Ah but unfortunately cormorants and ducks/geese etc are easy and I have lots of images of them. My favourite type of birds are small uncommon birds and waders. Small birds are very tricky to get close to (and we generally don't get many in London) and waders are often far out on mudflats or the like and impossible to get any closer to. If it was a question of taking squirrels/cormorants or not going out, I'd just not go out as I have no interest in taking things like that, but that's just my opinion.
I've never used a FF camera do don't know how much noise there would be and maybe they aren't the solution I'm after (maybe there is no solution). I am after a Sigma 150-600 Sport but just waiting for my Christmas bonus. Even then 600 on FF doesn't compare to the 600+1.5 crop (900mm) of a crop which is why I was thinking the d810 so I can crop to the same level and still have lower noise at higher ISO to get the required shutter speed. I currently have an effective focal length of 630mm and I'm finding that too short which is why I need more. My only options seem to be 150-600 on a crop body or on an FF camera using crop mode.
Except the d750 has about the same MP as the d7200 but without the 1.5 crop :/ the d810 is nearly good enough as in 1.5 crop it's down to 15mp but that's worse than the d7200. I'm hoping that if a d850 comes out with a 50mp sensor I'd still be able to crop to about 24mp with the 1.5 factor. But I'm dreaming, as if I can afford the d850 if it does come out!