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Sony Alpha DSLR-A200 (18-70mm and 75-300mm dual lens kit)

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At a Glance


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Reviewed on 3/11/08   

Sony's entry-level dSLR, the Alpha DSLR-A200, delivers a just-the-facts-ma'am shooting experience. For the most part, it provides the average design, basic feature set, modest performance, and better-than-snapshot photo quality that typifies this market segment: not bad, but not notable in any way, either.

The 10.2-megapixel A200 comes in two kits: one with the SAL-1870 18-70mm f3.5-5.6 lens, which we tested, and a dual-lens kit that adds the SAL-75300 75-300mm f4.5-5.6 model. Those two lenses, plus the new SAL-55200, currently comprise Sony's complete entry-level lens lineup. For other inexpensive alternatives you'll have to turn to compatible A-mount Konica Minolta, Sigma, or Tamron offerings.

At 22.4 ounces with battery and CF card, the A200 weighs more than most of its competitors, despite its plastic-clad body. It feels solid, though, and the rubberized grip has a deep indent for your finger that makes the camera comfortable to hold. If you plan to connect the camera directly to your computer rather than use a card reader (which we don't recommend), then avoid the A200. For one, the USB connector is located inside the CF card compartment, which means you have to leave the door open while downloading, potentially allowing all sorts of schmutz to get onto the card-slot contacts (and, if you're as accident prone as me, providing a protrusion to hit and hurl the camera to the floor). More important, Sony uses a proprietary combo USB/AV connector on all its dSLRs, for no reason that I can see other than to force you to buy a cable from them if you lose the bundled one. That just peeves me.



The A200 uses a simple, uncluttered layout for its controls and menu system. Like the A700, the A200 has Eye-Start AF sensors beneath the viewfinder.

Operating the A200 is straightforward. There are direct-access controls for ISO sensitivity, exposure compensation, and drive/bracketing/self-timer modes, while flash, AF, white balance, AF area, and D-RangeOptimizer settings are grouped under a screen pulled up by the Fn button.


Unlike the A700, you can't change settings directly via the information display (Quick Navi). Instead, you have to pull up this screen via the Fn button and dive in to change the settings. I slightly prefer the Quick Navi approach.

The A200 supports wireless flash, uncommon but not unique in this price class, and I actually like the bare-bones implementation. Rather than grafting pro multichannel support on the camera, which can be quite confusing to configure, it's basically binary: on or off. The rest of its features--and their implementations--is pretty typical for its class, including sensor-shift image stabilization and a 2.7-inch LCD. (For a complete list of features, download the PDF manual.) Like most, but not all, of the cameras in this class, the A200 lacks Live View shooting, but you can get that by forking over another $100 for the otherwise identical DSLR-A300.

CNET Labs' tests indicate it wakes up and shoots very quickly--in roughly half a second. Under good, high-contrast lighting, it focuses and shoots in just under a third of a second, rising to a moderate 1.2 seconds in dimmer conditions. Typically, it captures consecutive frames in 0.6 second, jumping up to 1.3 seconds with the built-in flash enabled. Its 2.8 frames-per-second continuous shooting speed falls around the class average. Also as is typical for this segment, it has limited non-JPEG burst shooting capabilities: only 3 frames raw+JPEG or 6 frames raw in burst mode. In casual testing, the image-stabilization system delivered about 3 stops of latitude over what the reciprocal rule dictates--1/10 second versus 1/70 second for a 70mm focal length--which is pretty standard.

Shooting speed
(Seconds--smaller is better)
Time to first shot  
Raw shot-to-shot time  
Shutter lag (dim light)  
Shutter lag (typical)  
Sony Alpha DSLR-A200
0.5 
0.6 
1.2 
0.3 
Nikon D40x (Nikon AF-S DX 18-55mm Lens)
0.2 
0.8 
0.9 
0.4 
Olympus Evolt E-510 (dual lens kit)
1.3 
0.8 
1.3 
0.4 
Pentax K100D
1.2 
0.5 
1.3 
0.4 

Typical continuous-shooting speed
(Frames per second--larger is better)
Pentax K100D
3.1 
Sony Alpha DSLR-A200
2.8 

I do have a few performance gripes, though. For one, the 2.7-inch LCD is very difficult to view in direct sunlight. Second, the focus indicators for the 9 off-center focus points are lines (rather than squares), and very dim--some people may have trouble seeing them. And the shutter, or at least the mirror flip it drives, sounds unusually loud.

Photo samples from the Sony Alpha DSLR-A200

On the whole, the A200's photos looked okay, if unexceptional. It renders reasonable, if somewhat warm or cool automatic white balance, depending upon the lighting. In standard mode, exposures seem skewed too much toward the midtones--probably to avoid blown-out highlights--so images look a bit low contrast. Its noise profile looks good until ISO 800, at which point color artifacts become obvious, but that's par for the course on low-end SLRs. And the kit lens we tested produced soft photos.

This is the first entry-level camera we've seen in 2008, so it's quite possible that we'll be back to reevaluate the Sony Alpha DSLR-A200 more favorably in the context of its competition. But for now, there are better, more interesting models from earlier years whose prices are dropping into its territory; the Nikon D40x or Canon EOS Rebel XTi if you're willing to forgo the image stabilization, or the slightly more expensive Pentax K10D if you're not. You can even opt for the similar and still-available two-year-old Alpha DSLR-A100, if you don't shoot a lot at high ISO settings, and put the money you save toward a better lens.


Basic Specs

Product Specifications:
Product Description: Sony a (alpha) DSLR-A200W - Digital camera
Product Type: Digital camera - SLR
Dimensions (WxDxH): 5.2 in x 2.8 in x 3.7 in
Supported Flash Memory: Microdrive , CompactFlash
Sensor Dust Reduction: Yes
Sensor Resolution: 10.2 megapixels
Focus Adjustment: Manual , Automatic
Min Focus Range: 15 in
Focal Length: 18 mm - 70 mm
Image Stabilizer: Optical (Super Steady Shot, CCD-shift mechanism)
Red Eye Reduction: Yes
Microphone: None
Viewfinder: Optical - Color - Eye-level penta-dach mirror
Display: LCD display - TFT active matrix - 2.7 in - Color
Supported Battery: 1 x Li-ion rechargeable battery - 1600 mAh ( Included )
Product Basic Spec:
Video input type: Digital camera
Sensor resolution: 10.2 megapixels
Optical sensor type: Super HAD CCD
Light sensitivity: ISO 100 , ISO 200 , ISO 400 , ISO 800 , ISO 1600 , ISO 3200 , ISO auto
Gross sensor resolution: 10,800,000 pixels
Still image format: RAW , JPEG , RAW + JPEG
Lens Aperture: F/3.5-5.6
Optical Zoom: 3.9 x
Camera Flash: Pop-up flash
External flash terminal: Hot shoe
Exposure metering: Spot , Multi-segment , Center-weighted
Exposure compensation: ±2 EV range, in 1/3 EV steps
Display type: 2.7 in LCD display
Battery type: - Lithium ion
Weight: 19.2 oz
Manufacturer Warranty: 1 year warranty


Buying choices

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