I'm more or less in that process now. I've come to love working with the RB67 I got last fall, but as anyone who has used one primarily for outdoor work will appreciate, sometimes it's too much. For such times I have a Nikon F-80 and F-801s, but after working with the RB I began to miss the F2 I used to own. At some point in years gone by I had come to the conclusion that moving to auto-focus was the thing to do. I think that was back when I still had it in my head that the funds would materialize for the fast ED telephoto that would allow me to make a decent go wildlife photography. There was probably a bit of vanity mixed in too, as I recall the lack of LCD screens on the equipment I was using made me feel a bit like the kid who showed up on the first day of school in the clothes that might have been cool last year. Well, I was younger then wasn't I.
If age and wisdom didn't cure me of all that, my foray into digital for a few years certainly did. After being caught up in that mad rush that has allowed the even the keen amateur to "improve" their images to the point they feel more like billboard illustrations than photographs, I no longer give a macaque's posterior for how up to date or with the times my equipment or practices are. (And only a little bit of that last statement is about playing to the audience, honest.)
Long story short, my "new" F2 arrived today. I'll probably keep one of the AF bodies, at least for now. The only problem I'm left with now is that the meter in the DP-1 finder doesn't couple with my collection of AF lenses. Not a huge concern since I'll probably be using an external meter with this most of the time anyway. Still, does anybody know if the pre-ai lens prongs can be added to newer lenses?
- Joe