The Nikon F100 is very good and allows choices of focusing methods and locations.
Thanks, but I want something to work woth all my manual lenses, and have a manual rewind option.The Nikon F100 is very good and allows choices of focusing methods and locations.
Alas, the back can be very delicate. I hadn't used my F100 for three or four years and I've found that, since, my back clasps have failed, just from the passage of time. I am having trouble finding anyone who can repair it.
Thanks, but I want something to work woth all my manual lenses, and have a manual rewind option.
The F100 can hand manual lenses too.
I treat all my photographic equipment as though I cannot afford to repair it, even though I can.
Me too. My back worked perfectly all through the camera's life. But the plastic can get brittle through just the passage of time, apparently. The clasps broke when I opened the back, something that shouldn't cause damage.
Be super, super careful with yours. And get a spare back. Unless somebody modified yours with metal latches, something I wish I knew could have been done back in the day.
The F6 does matrix meter with manual lenses. You need to enter the lens data into the camera. The new matrix meter algorithm requires that the camera knows the maximum aperture of the lens and the F100/F5 doen't have that information. The F4 didn't care because it's matrix algorithm is much simpler.Not to state the obvious if nobody has mentioned this point: only the F4 Matrix meters with Manual Focus lenses. N90s is a capable camera but all manual lenses revert to Center Weighted Metering if set to Matrix. This *will* affect flash photography in particular; my studio partner used a combination of F3/N90s with some AF lens and some MF lenses for weddings and the flash exposures were inconsistent and we figured it out. Switched her to all F4's and matching TTL flash and the negs were super consistent no matter which lens. An unsung strong point of the F4 is the Matrix Metering and flash.
As usual, a completely irrelevant response.The Nikon F100 is very good and allows choices of focusing methods and locations.
As usual, a completely irrelevant response.
I’ve read this service was once offered by Nikon. I actually consider the F4 to be a manual focus camera for my purposes. I like the classic interface on a more modern professional body. The F5 and F100 are outstanding cameras. I could be tempted with an F5, but I prefer my F90x to the F100.FWIW, somewhere (probably the manual) I read that the F5 could be optionally equipped with the folding tab index follower used on the older pro bodies to allow mounting of non AI lenses. Obviously not a service Nikon would do anymore. I asked a repair shop about it last year, and they didn't know about the option, nor how to obtain the parts.
I'm happy with only using AI-lenses on my F5 and F100, and mostly auto-focus ones at that. My main reason for using either one is to take advantage of AF, I can use the MF lenses on cameras that operationally simpler to use.
Mileage varies of course.
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