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Not sure if fast would count as a “need” but it would be more complementary to what I have and still be useful for low light situations (as it’s strictly film)
 
I wouldn’t say I use vintage nikkors on my FM2, even though the 24 2.8 AF-D and 105 micro AF-D aren’t exactly recent (my main lens is a voigtländer ultron 40 sl-iis), but am often tempted to get one or two Ai-s lenses because they would simply be a good match for the FM2.

Options I’m looking into are (because the Nikon complements a Leica M and is hence more used for longer lenses):
85 2.0 or 1.4
200 f/4.0

But also the 35 1.4 and 50 1.2 remain tempting because I remain most at easy with moderate focal lengths

start with a 50mm f/1.8, and you won't regret it; small, light, and very affordable but a stunning performer!
 
start with a 50mm f/1.8, and you won't regret it; small, light, and very affordable but a stunning performer!

would that be very different from the 50 1.8 AF (pre d-version)? I used this lens for 20+ years before replacing it with the voigtländer 40mm)
 
I have a Nikon Series E 50mm f1.8 that performs well. Certainly for the $6 USD it cost me. Majority of my glass is vintage Nikon manual focus.

Yes... I went through a few E series 75-150. A real gem of a lens and much smaller than the 80-200 of the era!
 
The 50/1.8 "semi-pancake" lens is quite sharp (but not wide open; there is distinctly a little focus shift). It's also a high-contrast modern lens with fairly miserable double-lined bokeh if used in that manner. A great compact bargain travel lens, but of a whole different category and feel from the vintage ones.

For fussy work on the copystand I use a 55/2.8 micro. But my "taking lens" kit has boiled down to just the single coated 50/2H and the classic 85/1.4 Ais. I permanently keep metal hoods on both.
 
That's a change I made about 10 years ago, from rubber folding hoods. One of the best investments in photographic accessories I ever made.

Agreed, metal hoods, especially the screw-in ones (HS- in Nikon parlance) are great and reside on my lenses during travel. Often a lens cap can be placed on the hood or failing that the appropriate sized plastic snap on food product cap will fit
 
Yes, the AiS lenses are needed for the FA's Shutter-priority and Program modes. Some criticize the FA's implementation of these modes, since it introduces a substantial shutter-delay (the body will stop the lens down and then re-measure the exposure before actually exposing the shot).

Long time FA owner here. As the chart from the Nikon FA manual below shows, Shutter-Priority and Program modes are available with AI and AI-converted lenses as well:


1777147826926.png


When the FA senses that a non-AI-s lens is in use in S and P modes, it uses the TTL sensor to take a final "mirror-up" exposure reading and adjusts the shutter speed accordingly. So while it functions, accuracy suffers. In the ~40 years I've had the FA, I've also had a 50mm f/1.8 AI which I never bother to "upgrade" to AI-s.
 
Long time FA owner here. As the chart from the Nikon FA manual below shows, Shutter-Priority and Program modes are available with AI and AI-converted lenses as well:


View attachment 423114

When the FA senses that a non-AI-s lens is in use in S and P modes, it uses the TTL sensor to take a final "mirror-up" exposure reading and adjusts the shutter speed accordingly. So while it functions, accuracy suffers. In the ~40 years I've had the FA, I've also had a 50mm f/1.8 AI which I never bother to "upgrade" to AI-s.

I stand corrected: This chart indicates that the AiS lens standard is only required for what Nikon calls "high-speed P-mode". Essentially avoiding the exposure-delay of taking a final mirror-up reading as you say. I never used a non-AiS lens on my WIfe's FA, so never experienced the exposure-delay older lenses would impose (and frankly avoided P-mode almost entirely as I preferred the A-mode from my FE/FE2, or else just manual exposure). Internet reviews of the FA often call out this exposure-delay, but it would seem that it only happened with non-AiS lenses.

I will still say that the FA, F4, and F301/501 were the only bodies with the full set of AiS-mount mechanical interface levers. Obviously, as Nikon didn't bother including it in later bodies, the advantages were not that significant (or even noticeable by users), so AiS was kind of a white-elephant technology in some ways.
 
I will still say that the FA, F4, and F301/501 were the only bodies with the full set of AiS-mount mechanical interface levers. Obviously, as Nikon didn't bother including it in later bodies, the advantages were not that significant (or even noticeable by users), so AiS was kind of a white-elephant technology in some ways.

While the F4 had it, since it only allowed use of non-CPU lenses in M and A modes, I'll be damned if I know what it did with that data.
 
would that be very different from the 50 1.8 AF (pre d-version)? I used this lens for 20+ years before replacing it with the voigtländer 40mm)

I own four copies of the 50mm f/1.8; all have slightly different exteriors but are identical optically and are all stunning performers.
 
While the F4 had it, since it only allowed use of non-CPU lenses in M and A modes, I'll be damned if I know what it did with that data.
I didn't realize that aspect of the F4: That seems very weird! The two main AiS features (linear aperture stop-down and a telephoto focal-length indicator) would seem useless for M and A mode. The only possible use I can think of is some sort of interaction with the matrix flash technology where knowing that you have a telephoto lens might be a part of the computations to optimize the flash settings.
 
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