Nikon DSLR Comparo: D750 -vs- D810

Posted by Berger-Bros Sales Staff on 26th Jul 2016

The D750 is Nikon's third full-frame DSLR for 2016, and for a lot of our readers, it might be the most significant. Sitting between the more affordable D610 and the pro-grade, high-resolution D810, the D750 borrows elements from both cameras. Impressively though - with the exception of its 24 megapixel sensor - the D750's build quality, ergonomics and feature set have much more in common with the more expensive of the two. The D750 has the latest generation Autofocus system, a new tilting 3.2” LCD, shoots at 6.5 frames per second, and advanced video functions!

 

 

The D750 offers faster continuous shooting than the D810 (6.5fps), an 'improved' version of the D810's 51-point AF system, a 91,000-pixel RGB metering sensor, a now tilt-able 3.2" RGBW LCD screen (which is otherwise the same), and the same OLED viewfinder display. The D750 also has the same video specification as the D810, which itself incorporated the refinements that Nikon has been adding with each successive DSLR release. In this instance, that means powered aperture control, the new 'Flat' picture control mode and the addition of zebra overexposure warnings (though no focus peaking yet). The D750 also offers Auto ISO control in manual exposure video shooting, retaining exposure compensation.

 

Some people will miss the 1/8000 minimum shutter duration like the D810 has, but aside from these omissions, arguably the only other thing of any significance that the D810 offers which the D750 doesn't is those extra 12 million pixels.

 

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