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Nikon Z50 Review with Nikon 200-500 mm lens | Nikon Z50

Nikon Z50 Review with Nikon 200-500 mm lens | Nikon Z50 vs Nikon D7500 | Nikon Z50 Autofocus Test |

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“Dipankar Bakshi Photography”

Nikon Z50 Review , Nikon Z50 Image Quality , Nikon Z50 Autofocus ,Nikon Z50 Video test . Nikon Z50 Wildlife photography .

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27 Comments

  1. I still think in budget to midrange cameras, Dslrs are better than Mirrorless. I switched to Sony from Nikon D7500, D850, 70-200mm, 200-500mm. All were used gear. I tried Sony A7Riv & A7iv and finally settled on the A7iv for the Real Time Tracking for Animals which A7Riv didn't have along with the 200-600mm. I have been on two trips with the mirrorless system and I feel like for the Single Point AF in viewfinder specially in tricky situations like bushes, branches, high contrast etc, Dslrs are superior to Mirrorless. Yes Mirrorless has all the bells and whistles like Animal Eye AF, Bird eye Af and so many features. Sometimes having all these features creates problems between taking the picture and choosing the right settings. And for Birds, if they are in bushes with close distracting background, its very hard to see the bird in the viewfinder if you don't have a f4, f2.8 lens which didn't happen with Optical viewfinders. And if the camera somehow focuses on the background then its very hard to get the focus back on subject unless you switch to manual focus or move the camera and focus on something closer. And you can't just rotate the focus wheel on the 200-600mm to get manual focus like on the 200-500mm, you have use lens switch or an extra button in the camera body. I still think the simple single point AF with no fancy features and manual focus with just twisting the focus ring gives a different piece of mind and ease of use and never running out of battery gives another piece of mind in jungles.
    The A1, A9, A9ii, Z9, R3 are on different level though.

    It takes a lot of time to get used to Mirrorless.
    And it have it advantages too like Live Exposure Simulation, Animal, Bird Eye AF. Real Time Tracking for Animals and Birds.

    For Human subjects i think all standard mirrorless cameras will beat the dslr counterparts but for wildlife i think theres still places to catch up with Dslr. The D7500 is a perfect budget wildlife camera.

  2. The Tamron 150-500 via the ETZ-adapter of Meike's works great on the Z50 – but only with camera firmware version 2.40 or lower! Nikon intorduced powerzoom support in 2.50, which seemingly breaks the Tamron support. Downgrade, however, is no problem, provided you still have the 2.40 bin-file at hand.

  3. Hi Dipankar, Thanks for the informative video 👍🏻

    Please guide me in finalizing One Mid Ranger DSLR/Mirrorless camera basically will be used for Wildlife photography and birding and occasionally used indoors.

    Nikon D7500 (70-300/200-500)
    Nikon Z50 (50-250/ 200-500 with FTZ adaptor)
    Canon 200D (55-250)

    These combos I was thinking of.. Need reach in National Parks..

    Please suggest your opinion or any other combo.

    Budget is not over (1.15lacs)

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