![]() The trade-off though was that only a x1.5 preview could be seen in the viewfinder and the crop resulted in a 15.4-million-pixel resolution image. One of the perks with the D810 was that by shooting in the DX crop mode and adding a battery grip it was possible to shoot at 7 frames per second. Utilising the former reduces the image size to 3936×2624 pixels (a resolution of 10.3-million-pixels), whereas the 1.2x crop mode has the effect of reducing the resolution to 16.7 million-pixels from 24.3 million-pixels, with a maximum image size of 5008x3336pixels. For those who’d like to gain more reach from their lenses, the D750 also has a 1.5x DX Crop mode as well as a 1.2x Crop Mode. The Expeed 4 also allows for a respectable shooting speed to 6.5 frames per second at full resolution. The D750 features the latest Expeed processor, the Expeed 4, and Nikon claims improvements to the Automatic White Balance accuracy and the in-camera processing of JPEG images have been made. Unlike the Nikon D810 and the D750’s DX sensor stablemates, the D750 has an optical low-pass filter which will prevent moiré patterning at the expense of some finer detail. ![]() This is the same resolution boasted by the Nikon D610, although Nikon says this is a newly designed sensor. FeaturesĪt the heart of the Nikon D750 is a 35mm full frame FX CMOS image sensor with a resolution of 24.3-million-pixels. On paper, the D750 is an enthusiast DSLR smattered with some eyebrow-raising professional standard specifications and a host of neat features. The D750 adds a few unique features of its own too, bringing quite a few full-frame firsts such as a tiltable LCD screen and a newly developed autofocusing module. The D750 has the same 24.3-million-pixel resolution of the D610 but also inherits many of the great new features we saw on the D810, such as highlight protection metering and flat video recording. Nikon says this camera is targeting enthusiast photographers and is designed with the aspirational and hobbyist photographer in mind. The new Nikon D750 occupies a space between the D610 and the D810. It feels like the dust has only just settled on the announcement of the Nikon D810, and now Nikon has announced a fifth addition to their current full frame DSLR line-up. Nikon D750 Review – Introduction See more images from the Nikon D750 in our sample gallery
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