One of our favorite DSLRs in the past few years is the Nikon D7100, which was introduced way back in February 2013. The D7200 isnt a radical upgrade by any means, yet it still adds some important features, most notably a larger buffer, improved autofocus performance in low light, 60p video, Wi-Fi with NFC, and 15% better battery life.
Its features was: -
24.2MP CMOS sensor with no optical low-pass filter
Multi-CAM 3500DX II 51-point AF system, all sensitive to -3EV
2, 016-pixel RGB metering sensor, used for 3D subject tracking in AF-C
ISO 100-25, 600, with ISO 51, 200 and 102, 400 black and white modes
6 fps continuous shooting ( 7 fps in 1.3x crop mode) with increased buffer depth
1/8000 sec maximum shutter speed
3.2, 1.2M dot RGBW LCD display
1080/60p video ( 1.3x crop only) with clean output over HDMI and Flat Picture Control
Dual SD card slots
Wi-Fi with NFC
Magnesium alloy weather-sealed body