And the back side illuminated sensor should improve low light performance which is obviously key for night photographers.
D750 vs d810 low light.
The d750 is smaller lighter less expensive and the best choice for most reasonable people.
The d750 is faster and faster to use.
The d810 is smoother and quieter and is intended more for dedicated landscape studio and portrait pros.
D810 high iso low light shootout.
Given its price it comes as a surprise that the nikon d750 produces better results in low light than its more expensive sibling.
At high iso levels the camera produces images with far less noise than the d810.
In the video above heather lahtinen compares iso performance of the nikon d750 and nikon d850.
The performance is impressive that you can even print your images and still get a decent one.
But when it comes to low light shooting like weddings it falls behind in terms of focus acquisition and providing clean images at iso over 1600.
It could be since the camera has a slightly lower resolution giving the sensor the capability to gather more light.
It scores camera sensors for color depth dxo portrait dynamic range dxo landscape and low light sensitivity dxo sports and also gives them an overall score.
The d810 is for dedicated full time landscape shooters or for people who need a quieter smoother camera.
The d810 will most likely hold its dynamic range crown with its impressive performance at iso 64 and its pixel level sharpness will be superior thanks to the omission of the optical low pass filter olpf.
Its not just the amount of noise but the quality of the noise which tends to be patchy and discolored.
It seems that the d750 is built for low light shooting.
At its native resolution the nikon d750 is 1 5 fps faster than the d810 although the latter can potentially get up to 7 fps in dx mode.