Nikon SLR Cameras

Nikon d200 are good camera than d90?

odek
odek

Nikon d200 are good camera than d90?

John P
John P

D200 is more of a semi-professional camera, thus will give less help to an absolute beginner than the D90. Both will give good pictures.

Vintage Music
Vintage Music

You should really learn the Basics of Photography before buying any DSLR type camera. The D90 is the better camera, is my choice. The D200 is discontinued.

asimpleson mumbai
asimpleson mumbai

The D200 has semi pro feel to it and superb built quality. The D90 is similar and will do everything that the D200 can do and more.

The major difference technically is that the D90 has a CMOS sensor that is supposedly better that the older CCD version found in D200. Also the D90 inbuilt intelligence is also supposedly a tad better than the D200.

Given the price to performance and D200 being an older dated model the D90 is a much better choice.

You probably already know that D7000 is an upgrade to D90. The D90 however is a great and proven camera if one can get it at a greater discount.

Taylor
Taylor

They are both outdated cameras, but that doesn't make them bad. The 200 is much older than the 90.

CiaoChao
CiaoChao

Depends on what you intend to use the camera for.

The D200 is an older, APS-C professional grade product. It's designed to be fast and tough to cope with the demands that a professional will put the camera through.

The D90 is an advanced consumer grade product, and is not weathersealed or toughened. It does however have a newer sensor and a video capability.

Paul Hxyz
Paul Hxyz

The D200 is much more rugged and is capable of being converted to Infra-red capability. It has ENOUGH resolution - you can print quite large if you know what you are doing. It is heavier than the D90. The D90 will feel like a plastic toy compared to the D200. The D90 can do video and is the very first DSLR to have this ability but it is not a great video camera. I don't know if the D90 can shoot "RAW" files but I know the D200 can and if you do that you can correct technical errors using Photoshop or some other software similar to it. I have actually used a D200 and I liked it. It is a tough professional grade camera and is probably the first DSLR to slow down the depreciation value on this type of camera. The newer cameras are better but if all you can afford is a D200 it is an extremely durable piece of hardware.