Nikon boosts flagship mirrorless cameras with Z7II and Z6II upgrades
Nikon continues rollouts in the mirrorless camera market, announcing the Z7II and Z6II mirrorless cameras with significant upgrades over predecessors.
The Nikon Z7 and Nikon Z6 were launched in late 2018 as Nikon's first real mirrorless cameras. The Nikon Z7 was the high-end model whereas the Nikon Z6 cut the resolution and gave a higher focus on video. In our reviews for the Nikon Z7 and Nikon Z6, we were thrilled with their performance and connectivity features. Now they are getting even better.
A big change to both the Z6 and Z7 is the processor. Instead of being equipped with a single EXPEED 6 processor, they are now going to be set up with two EXPEED 6 image processors each. This will greatly improve performance.
This will also lend itself to other improvements on the cameras including improved low-light autofocus detection. These are also the first Nikon cameras to support Eye-Detection AF and Animal-Detection AF with video recording.
In a move clearly inspired by the feedback it received after launching the Z6 and Z7, Nikon has added a second card slot to each camera. They now have a CFExpress II/XQD card slot and a secondary SD UHS-II card slot. You can use whichever media you prefer or shoot both for redundancy. Though the CFExpress slot will be faster.
The new Nikon Z7II
Thanks to the twin processors, the Nikon Z7II is able to increase its shooting buffer by 3.3 times. The Z7 was capped at around 20 shots when firing in burst mode at 9 frames per second. The new model can shoot at 10 frames per second with a roughly 70 shot buffer.
Otherwise, it boasts the same features of the original Z7.
The new Nikon Z6II
Looking at the Z6II, continuous burst mode shooting was upped from 12 frames per second to 14 frames per second, supported by 3.5 times the buffer, expanding it above 70 shots as well at full resolution.
The Nikon Z7 and Nikon Z6 were launched in late 2018 as Nikon's first real mirrorless cameras. The Nikon Z7 was the high-end model whereas the Nikon Z6 cut the resolution and gave a higher focus on video. In our reviews for the Nikon Z7 and Nikon Z6, we were thrilled with their performance and connectivity features. Now they are getting even better.
A big change to both the Z6 and Z7 is the processor. Instead of being equipped with a single EXPEED 6 processor, they are now going to be set up with two EXPEED 6 image processors each. This will greatly improve performance.
This will also lend itself to other improvements on the cameras including improved low-light autofocus detection. These are also the first Nikon cameras to support Eye-Detection AF and Animal-Detection AF with video recording.
In a move clearly inspired by the feedback it received after launching the Z6 and Z7, Nikon has added a second card slot to each camera. They now have a CFExpress II/XQD card slot and a secondary SD UHS-II card slot. You can use whichever media you prefer or shoot both for redundancy. Though the CFExpress slot will be faster.
The new Nikon Z7II
Thanks to the twin processors, the Nikon Z7II is able to increase its shooting buffer by 3.3 times. The Z7 was capped at around 20 shots when firing in burst mode at 9 frames per second. The new model can shoot at 10 frames per second with a roughly 70 shot buffer.
Otherwise, it boasts the same features of the original Z7.
- 45.7-megapixel BSI CMOS sensor
- 54-35,600 ISO range
- 493 on-sensor phase-detect autofocus points
The new Nikon Z6II
Looking at the Z6II, continuous burst mode shooting was upped from 12 frames per second to 14 frames per second, supported by 3.5 times the buffer, expanding it above 70 shots as well at full resolution.
- 24.5-megapixel BSI CMOS sensor
- 100-51,200 ISO range, expandable to ISO 204,800
- 273-point hybrid autofocus system
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