Testseek.com have collected 165 expert reviews of the Nikon D7100 and the average rating is 86%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Nikon D7100.
April 2013
(86%)
165 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(96%)
905 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
860100165
The editors liked
No antialiasing filter
51point autofocus system
Long battery life
Excellent image quality
Great build
Buttons well placed
Stereo microphone port
Audio monitoring
Broad dynamic range
Excellent build quality
Feels like a professional model DSLR
Though slightly smaller than others in its class
Comfortable grip provides secure fit in hand
Partial weather sealing and partial metal construction
Excellent image quality with great pe...
Superb control over image nose
Good coloraccuracy after tweaking
Superb dynamic range
Superfast autofocus
Ultrashort blackout
Generally fast and responsive
Dual memory cards can provide instant backup
Manual focus assist direction indicator
Excell
The Nikon D7100 is a fast-shooting
Well-designed camera that's comfortable to use
Fast
51-point autofocus system. Dual SD card slots. Large pentaprism viewfinder. Excellent control layout. Preserves details at high ISO settings. Shoots at 6fps. 1.3x crop mode available. Very fast startup. Vertical grip add-on available. Sharp rear LCD
Image & build quality
Ergonomics
Dust & moisture resistant
Great image quality
Simple to learn if you're an experienced Nikon user
Very lightweight when used with primes
Dual SD card ports mean that you can shoot for quite a long time
Fast autofocusing when the specific point is selec
Superb
Sharp stills
Extremely fast and accurate focusing
Advanced photographers will love it
Excellent quaity and high ISO noise performance
51-point AF system which works at f8
Dust and moisture sealed body
1.3x crop mode
Built-in stereo mics and headphone socket.
Outstanding low ISO performance in both JPEG and Raw files
Very good default JPEG settings
Excellent build quality and very good ergonomics and handling
Effective auto white balance in a variety of lighting conditions
Comprehensive camera customization options
Auto ISO selection can be linked to lens focal length
Accurate AF system (inherited from Nikon D4)
Center point autofocus a
Superb LCD screen
Responsive
Excellent specifications
Accurate AWB system
Intuitive metering system
High degree of customisation offered
The editors didn't like
Average lowlight performance
Average continuous shooting speed
No aperture adjustment in Live Mode
No zebra patterns
Slight tendency to overexpose photos
Buffer fills very quickly when shooting 14-bit RAW images
Which limits high speed shooting
Almost flush OVF eyepiece and awkward placement of AE-L/AF-L button can result in photographers hitting their thumb again...
Frequent and severe overexposure
AWB not perfect under artificial light
Bizarre Auto ISO
Indistinct ISO button
Very poor liveview
Aperture locked in video mode
NoiseReduction forced at ISO 800
Lens correction slow down camera
Level difficult to se
While the image quality is quite good
It's not significantly better than that of the D7100's cheaper sibling
The D5200. And the lack of aperture control in movie mode gets a facepalm
Limited burst shooting in Raw mode. On the heavy side. Some image noise at ISO 3200 and above. Lacks built-in GPS. No PC Sync socket
Buffer
Noise at high ISOs
Live View performance Share & EnjoyTweet Author
Chris Main
Slower focusing performance when all of the points are selected (auto)
No aperture control in video mode
Focusing points don't go to edges
Poor placement of video button
Movie capture still cumbersome
Beware of noise in 1.3x mode
Lack of OLPF makes little difference to image quality
Poor continuous RAW shooting
Poor Full-time-servo AF in Live view
Need accessories for Wi-Fi and GPS.
Small image buffer severely limits burst capacity in Raw-enabled modes
Slow AF in live view and video modes (compared to mirrorless APS-C cameras)
No real-time aperture adjustment preview in live view
Abstract: While 2012 was the year of the full-frame cameras , Nikon has kick-started its 2013 DSLR releases with a DX-format camera. The D7100 is its latest DX-format camera that comes with features that befit a high-end model. While the D7000 was sandwiched firmly...
Abstract: While 2012 was the year of the full-frame cameras , Nikon has kick-started its 2013 DSLR releases with a DX-format camera. The D7100 is its latest DX-format camera that comes with features that befit a high-end model. While the D7000 was sandwiched firmly...
Mostly great ergonomics, Highresolution images full of detail, Leadingclass autofocus system
Information display doesn't access all settings shown, AF mode switcher button is hard to reach, Live View menu is sparse
On the face of it, the Nikon D7100 hits a lot of the right buttons with very little to complain about. The camera comes with Nikon's outstanding ergonomics which makes it easy for you to power on the camera, adjust your settings and just start shooting (w...
Abstract: Bastante sorprendidos y felices hemos acabado la prueba de la Nikon D7100 en Xataka Foto . Una actualización de la conocida D7000 que ha demostrado muchas maneras. En nuestro análisis de la Nikon D7100 hemos comprobado el salto de calidad gracias al aban...
appareil photo bien pensé, agréable a utiliser, rapide, qualité d'image.
bien que la qualité d'image soit très bonne, elle n'est pas fondamentalement meilleure que celle du Nikon D5200, absence de contrôle de l'ouverture en vidéo. est une vraie déception
Le Nikon D7100 est sans conteste un excellent reflex numérique plutôt destiné aux amateurs avancés et le semi-professionnels. Malgré toutes ses nouveautés, l'écart de qualité d'image avec le D5200 ne suffira peut-être pas pour certains à franchir le...
Published: 2013-06-27, Author: David , review by: begeek.fr
Abstract: Je vais donc aujourd'hui vous présenter le Nikon D7100 , un reflex milieu de gamme, ainsi que le Coolpix A, un compact qui se veut l'égal d'un reflex.Le D7100 est ce qui se fait de mieux en appareil milieu de gamme chez Nikon. Pas encore le haut de gamme ...
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(80%)
Published: 2013-05-21, Author: David , review by: erenumerique.fr
Excellente construction, Finition, Verrouillage de la molette des modes, Viseur 100% et lumineux, Excellente qualité d'image, Piqué du capteur élevé, Autofocus véloce, Montée en sensibilité jusqu'à 3200 voir 6400iso, Qualité d'image en vidéo, Prise casque
Ergonomie en retrait par rapport aux modèles semi, pro, Pas d'écran orientable ni tactile, Pas de wifi ni GPS, Buffer trop faible, Peu de réglages de l'exposition pendant le tournage en vidéo, AF peu efficace en vidéo, Filtres arty peu intéressants
Nouveau fer de lance de la marque, le Nikon D7100 succède au D7000 avec un capteur APS-C de 24 Mpix sans filtre passe-bas, un nouvel autofocus et une construction haut de gamme. Rencontrera-t-il le succès ? Pour le savoir nous avons passé plusieurs jours ...
Enorme résolution / RAW très riches, Excellent AF à détection de phase, ISO jusqu'à 3200, 6400 encore OK, Viseur / Fonction 1,3X / bel écran
Détection de contraste médiocre, Touche ISO / accès HDR et D-Lighting, 24 MPix nécessitent mieux que 18-105 mm, Vidéo stagne un peu / prix en hausse
Presque deux ans et demi après un D7000 couronné de succès, Nikon lance dans l'arène des reflex un successeur digne de ce nom. Le D7100 a en effet profité d'innovations apparues sur des modèles plus haut de gamme. La plus palpable étant l'adoption de la c...
Qualité de construction irréprochable, Réactivité de premier ordre, Qualité d'image jusqu'à 3200 ISO, Ergonomie professionnelle
Restrictions des paramètres vidéo, Qualité d'image trop proche de celle du D5200, Ecran non-orientable, Pas de WiFi ni de GPS intégré
Le D7100 hisse la barre très haut tant par son ramage que son plumage et satisfera aussi bien les photographes amateurs exigeants que les professionnels. Un pari réussi pour Nikon qui ne doit cependant pas se reposer sur ses lauriers et doit encore travai...