anyone shooting a nikon D200?

From what I've heard the D200 is a similar camera to the D80 in terms of pro/consumer comparison and 800 ISO was the average max iso people were willing to go to. Of course higher ISO's were usable but you had to trade off some image quality.
 
I try not to take my D200 over ISO 800 as i'm normally dissapointed in the results if it's over 800. However auto ISO works very well on the camera and manages noise levels great if your feeling lazy.
 
Straycat, used one for two years professionally; great piece of kit that I had not one problem with. only upgraded to a D2X for the built-in grip and slightly better weatherproofing.

As far as useable ISOs go, never had a problem shooting at ISO 1000, providing I got exposure nailed within 1/3rd stop of perfect; go either side of that and then you run the risk of bringing out too much noise with processing. Still, for A4 prints ISO 1000 was fine.

I shot a lot at ISO400 and 640 without any doubts over quality. Okay, compared to the D300/300s and the high-end, newer Nikons then the technology has moved on a lot but considering mint D200s are shifting for £400-£450 these days, they're a bargain.

FPS is good, battery life is okay (better with a grip and two batteries fitted) and handling is second to none. The menu system is brilliant, the controls are infinitely better than the competition (namely the 30D and 40D, which i used at work) and AF is good with both AF-S and AF-D lenses. Metering on mine was just about spot-on, although i mainly shot in manual.

I generally shot JPEG, which were fine - plenty of detail - although I did find that the raw files it produced were very flexible if you wanted to put in a bit of time on the computer. I won't say they're better or worse than the competition; it just produces great results.

As a workhorse camera for everyday shooting it's a great buy. For large prints you're probably asking too much for A1+ resizing but for A3+ it's more than capable.
 
thanks thats very detailed

if i shoot fine rather than basic does it help the high iso?
 
thanks thats very detailed

if i shoot fine rather than basic does it help the high iso?

Can't really answer that one really because I only ever shot fine or raw.... I expect in terms of IQ it'll look worse because of the lower pixel count on the basic setting but in terms of more noise then I'm not sure...
 
Only problem with the d200 v the d300 is i find the colours to be quite flat, not a major thing but noticeable
 
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