I have just bought an F2 and I have to say that I am impressed rather than gushing, but then I've not had it for long. I have tended to buy the FM series in the past, but I also have an FE, FE2 and F3. An F2 body is the F2, the prism is what makes the variant. I picked up an F2a (which is an F2 with the DP-11 finder) because I like match-needle metering rather than LED of the F2as (DP-12 finder) and the F2a has a wire-wound resistor which should be more robust than the carbon ring resistors in the DP-1 and the FRE in the DP-12. I also have a few third-party lenses without the bunny-ears meaning I would be limited to stop-down metering with the DP-1 or DP-2 finder. The F2 is heavy, and looks bulky but is not really that much bigger to hold than say an FM2n. To be honest, it is an old camera and the ergonomics are good but not awe-inspiring. The aperture and shutter readouts in the viewfinder are small, the metering is a bit slow and a bit primitive but I am expecting this camera to work long after I am gone. Keep in mind though that these cameras are old. The latest model will now be 40+ years old and it will need a service. If you sent it to the best (Sover Wong) there is an 18 month waiting list and it will cost you the same for the service as you probably paid for the camera in the first place. While they are legendary, they do have weak-points. The resistors in the meters is one of them, the plastic battery box can crack (common to many Nikons and you have to go in the front after taking out the mirror box to fix it properly), and you shouldn't leave the shutter cocked for more than a few hours to keep the speeds accurate (info from Sover Wong). They are very nice cameras, just be wary that even picking up a good one, you are likely to need to pay for a good CLA, after that though it should last you for as long as you want.