Its release echoes the message that Nikon sees a bright future in APS-C cameras, especially the kind that appeal to people who like to pursue photography as a hobby and fancy a small system they can grow with that doesn’t come with the same outlay of buying into full frame. To offer a better idea of the Z 50’s positioning, it sits below the Z 6 and Z 7, presenting a Nikon D7500-like feature set with usability closer to that of Nikon’s advanced entry-level DSLR, the D5600.
Features
Study the Z 50 from the front and you’ll notice it shares similarities with the Z 6 and Z 7 in terms of its look and styling. The sensor that’s located directly behind the large Z mount is closely related to the 20.9-million-pixel APS-C CMOS chip that’s been used before in the Nikon D500 and D7500. It has a low-pass filter and teams up with an Expeed 6 image processor that sees it shoot across an ISO range of 100-51,200, which is expandable to ISO 204,800.
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Esta historia es de la edición January 18, 2020 de Amateur Photographer.
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