The Nikon D850 is here to replace the three year old
D810 at the helm of Nikon's high-resolution lineup.
The Nikon D850 has a 45.7MP FX (full frame) BSI CMOS
sensor without a low-pass filter, the first backside-illuminated sensor in
Nikon's lineup, can capture 7 frames a second stills (8fps with the new MB-D18
grip), has a base ISO of 64 and tops out at ISO 25,600, natively. The D850
shares the EXPEED 5 processor as well as the 153-point focusing system of the
Nikon D5, which has 99 cross type sensors (15 of which can focus at f/8).
The Nikon D850 captures 4K video at 30/25/24p and
uses the entire sensor surface (unlike the bigger Nikon D5 which has a 1.5x
crop when shooting 4K video). For the first time on a Nikon DSLR there are
zebras and focus peaking, though that works only for 1080p. Speaking of 1080p,
the D850 can capture slow motion at up to 120p in FullHD. There's also 4K
timelapse in camera as well as up to 8K timelapse through the built-in
intervalometer.
The back of the Nikon D850 has a tilting LCD
touchscreen which supports Touch AF in Live View. There's also Silent
Photography in Live View that can shoot 6 fps at full resolution without the
mechanical shutter noise.
The Nikon D850 can capture 51 14-bit RAW files
before its buffer is filled - twice as many shots as the D810. Those shots are
recorded to the fast XQD card in the first slot, while a second SD slot can be
used for overflow or backup.
The battery is the EN-EL15a - a slightly more
powerful version of Nikon's popular battery, that promises the immense 1800
shots battery life and 70 hours of video. The Nikon D850 is compatible with the
old EN-EL15 battery too.
There's Wi-Fi as well as Bluetooth, which is used in
conjunction with Nikon's SnapBridge app to transfer images to your smartphone
as you're shooting. The Nikon D850 will be available in September at a price of US$ 3,299.95.