
Sony
The Sony Alpha DSLR‑A200K is a 10.2 MP APS‑C DSLR released in 2008, featuring a Super HAD CCD sensor, 3.5‑stop Super SteadyShot stabilization, and a 9‑point AF system that is 40% faster than its predecessor. It ships as a kit with an 18‑70 mm f/3.5‑5.6 lens and targets entry‑level to intermediate photographers seeking a lightweight, budget‑friendly DSLR.
Pros
Current
$196.98
Average
$215.61
Lowest
$196.98
Highest
$234.56
Lower = better sales rank
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Cons
From Expert Reviews
Praised by Experts
Criticized by Experts
From User Reviews
Users Love
Users Complain About
Expert Opinion
Professional reviewers praised the A200 as a faster, lighter upgrade over the A100, highlighting its 3.5‑stop Super SteadyShot, BIONZ processor‑driven tone richness, and 40% quicker AF as strong points for beginners. However, they noted the loss of features like mirror lock‑up, depth‑of‑field preview, live view, and video, and considered the 3 fps burst rate dated even for its 2008 release.
What Users Say
Everyday users commend the camera’s ease of use, clear LCD, solid battery life, and effective stabilization with the kit lens, but repeatedly criticize the cheap‑feel plastic build, slow burst speed, cumbersome menus, and noisy high‑ISO performance. Dust on the sensor without advanced cleaning is also a recurring complaint.
Common Complaints
Slow 3 fps continuous shooting, plastic body feel, lack of live view/video, noisy high‑ISO images above ISO 1600, and limited advanced controls (no depth‑of‑field preview or mirror lock‑up).
How It Compares
vs. Canon EOS Rebel XSi
Advantages
Disadvantages
Choose the Rebel XSi for marginally faster burst and Canon lens ecosystem; choose the A200 for built‑in stabilization and Sony lens compatibility.
vs. Nikon D60
Advantages
Disadvantages
Pick the D60 if you prefer Nikon ergonomics and metering; pick the A200 for superior handheld stabilization.
vs. Sony Alpha DSLR‑A100
Advantages
Disadvantages
A200 is the better choice for most beginners due to speed and stabilization, unless you need the advanced controls retained on the A100.
vs. Sony Alpha DSLR‑A230
Advantages
Disadvantages
Select the A230 for ultra‑light travel use; select the A200 when you need in‑body stabilization and more direct controls.