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- The Nikon D80 vs. The Nikon D200
The Nikon D80 vs. The Nikon D200
- By SLR Today
- Published 11/19/2006
- Buyer's Guide
Nikon D80 vs. Nikon D200 - A Side-by-Side Comparison
The Nikon D80 and Nikon D200 are two of Nikon's most popular digital
SLR cameras. They each offer great photo quality at a very reasonable
price. Deciding which of the two to purchase is often quite difficult,
and usually comes down to choosing the features you really want, and
determining how much you are willing to spend.
Image Sensor
Autofocus Sytem
Speed and Performance
LCD Display
Viewfinder
Exposure, Metering, and ISO
Flash
White Balance
Additional Features
Verdict: The Nikon D200 is intended for advanced enthusiasts and professional photographers on a budget. Accordingly, the D200 offers some features you won't find on the D80, which is why it may cost up to $600 more (body only). The D80, on the other hand, is specifically designed for prosumer crowd, with plenty power to allow almost anyone to take great photos, but enough limitations in certain areas to keep in within the sub-$1000 price range. Overall, however, these two cameras are surprisingly similar, which gives the D80 a slight edge, especially if price is one of the most important factors in your decision.
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Nikon D80 |
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Nikon D200 |
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$950 5.2 x 4.1 x 3.0 1 pound, 5 ounces |
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$1500 6 x 4 x 2 2 pounds |
Image Sensor
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The Nikon D80 is equipped with a 10.2-megapixel 23.6 x 15.8mm Nikon DX format CCD image sensor. The sensor can capture images up to 3,872 x 2,592 pixels in resolution. |
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The Nikon D200 has a essentially the same 10.2-megapixel Nikon DX format CCD image sensor with up to 3,872 x 2,592 pixel resolution. |
Autofocus Sytem
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11-point autofocus
system with the Multi-CAM 1000 AF Sensor Module. Each focus point may be used individually
for precise focusing, while the center sensor can be switched to
wide-frame for broader coverage. Manual and autofocus modes available. |
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The same 11-point autofocus
system is found on the D200. The user can choose individual focus areas from 11-area wide and 7-area wide AF for Single Area AF, Dynamic AF for moving subjects, Closest Subject Priority Dynamic AF, and Group Dynamic AF. |
Speed and Performance
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The Nikon D80 can power up in as little as 0.18 seconds.
Shutter speed ranges from 30 to 1/4,000 seconds and shutter response is
quite fast, with a delay of only 80 milliseconds. In continuous
shooting mode, the D80 can capture up to 100 M-sized JPEGs or 6 RAW
photos at 3 frames per second. |
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On average, the Nikon D200 is only slightly faster than the D80 - taking only 0.15 seconds
to power up. It also has a shutter speed range of 30 to 1/8,000 seconds
and an impressively brief shutter lag time of about 50 milliseconds. At about 5 frames per
second, the Nikon D200 can take up to 37 large/fine JPEGs, 22 RAW
images. |
LCD Display
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2.5-inch LCD display with approximately 230,000 pixels and a maximum viewing angle of 160 degrees. |
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2.5-inch TFT LCD
display with approximately 230,000 pixels and a maximum viewing angle
of 170 degrees. Images can magnified up to 400%. The D200 also has a large top LCD that displays important information, such as shooting mode, battery condition, card information, gridline display, shutter speed, f-stop, and shots remaining. |
Viewfinder
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Pentaprism viewfinder with 0.94x magnification. May be adjusted using a diopter control knob. A integrated grid display can also be switched on to aid in composition. |
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Fixed eye-level Pentaprism viewfinder with 0.94x magnification and 95% coverage. Diopter adjustments can also be made from -2.0 to +1.0m-1. |
Exposure, Metering, and ISO
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The D80 has an advanced auto exposure system driven
by Nikon's exclusive 3D-Color Matrix Metering II. Metering range is EV
0-20, adjustable in increments of 1/3 or 1/2 EV. Brightness, color,
contrast, selected focus area and camera-to-subject distance are all
compared with an onboard database of 30,000 reference photos, and
calculated to give optimum results. Exposure modes include Digital
Vari-Program (Auto, Portrait, Landscape, Macro Close up, Sports, Night
Landscape, Night Portrait); Programmed Auto [P] with flexible program;
Shutter-Priority Auto [S]; Aperture Priority Auto [A]; Manual [M]. The
standard ISO range is 100 to 1600, but may be boosted further by using
the modes HI-0.3, HI-0.7 or HI-1. |
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The Nikon D200 also uses the 3D Color Matrix Metering II system (the same used on the D2x). The metering is handled by 1,005-segment RGB sensor that provides center-weighted (6, 8, 10, or 13-millimeter diameter circle in center of frame) or spot (3-millimeter diameter circle focused on subject) metering. Metering range is EV 0-20 for center-weighted, and EV 2-20 for spot metering with increments of 1/3, 1/2, or 1 EV. Standard ISO range is 100 - 1600 with a 3200 Hi-1 boost. |
Flash
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Built-in i-TTL flash system that evaluates flash
exposure and provides balanced fill flash in nearly any situation.
Repeating flash and modeling flash functions available. Contains
advanced wireless lighting system that remote controls the B-800 and
SB-600 wireless speedlites. |
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TTL flash control by 1,005-pixel RGB sensor. Also compatible with many Nikon speedlites, including the SB-800, 80DX, 28DX, 28, 27, and 22. |
White Balance
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Auto (TTL white balance with 420-pixel RGB sensor),
six manual modes with fine-tuning, color temperature setting (Kelvin),
preset white balance; white balance bracketing available. |
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Auto (TTL white balance with 1,005-pixel RGB sensor), six manual modes
with fine-tuning, color temperature setting, preset white balance,
white balance bracketing possible (2 to 9 frames in increments of 1, 2,
or 3) |
Additional Features
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The nikon D80 has several preset optimal image
settings, including Normal, Softer, Vivid, More vivid, Portrait, Custom
and Black-and-white. Three major color modes are also available: Mode
Ia renders natural-looking skin tones out of the camera (sRGB), Mode
II: realizes a wider color range suitable for processing or retouching
(Adobe RGB), and Mode IIIa renders vivid landscape and floral colors
out of the camera (sRGB). The D80's lithium Ion battery can hold a very
impressive 2,700 images per charge. Has SD Memory Card Slot and USB 2.0. |
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Contains new image optimization modes that allow the photographer to better control sharpening, tone (contrast), color,
saturation, and hue, with choices from Normal, Softer, Vivid, More
vivid, Portrait, Custom, and Black-and-white. According to Nikon, "multiple exposure enables up to 10 separate images to be used to create
a single composite to produce imaginative and even surreal results." Uses a EN-EL3e rechargeable lithium-ion battery that supports up to 1,800 images on a
single charge. May be connected to a GPS unit via a MC-35 adapter cord. |
Verdict: The Nikon D200 is intended for advanced enthusiasts and professional photographers on a budget. Accordingly, the D200 offers some features you won't find on the D80, which is why it may cost up to $600 more (body only). The D80, on the other hand, is specifically designed for prosumer crowd, with plenty power to allow almost anyone to take great photos, but enough limitations in certain areas to keep in within the sub-$1000 price range. Overall, however, these two cameras are surprisingly similar, which gives the D80 a slight edge, especially if price is one of the most important factors in your decision.
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