I was little weary posting here at first, but I'm happy I did. It would seem that there is a genuine desire to help strangers here and I truly appreciate all the replies.
I also appreciate the recommendations and advice as far as MF is concerned. I'm sure I'll be coming back to this thread at some point in the near future, depending on how much of a craftsman I turn out to be. I have two, nonworking Minolta bodies and I'd like to see if I can salvage a working camera out of them.
That's an incredibly generous offer and it definitely interests me, but I couldn't ask that of you. I ordered an F5 from KEH.com that should get here sometime Monday. I figure, if it's what I'm looking for: I'll know. If it's not, I'll return it and continue down the list of possibilities (KEH seems to have a wonderful selection for such a thing). I just wanted to say that the offer itself is much obliging.
The fact of it is, the camera comes in a distant third after the photographer, film, and development in terms of importance to the photograph. Or, this is my humble opinion of it. Either way, I'll keep posting; even if it requires I use a computer.
Andrew, the offer still stands...you will already have an F5 to compare against the F4s. Would not have offered if it would have been an imposition. These are the kind of folks here on APUG. The F4s was the first AF Nikon I owned and I will always treasure it, but it won't keep pace with the F100s. Again, though I can use all those delightful ai lenses with the F4s. Your decision either way.
I kinda-sorta agree.I have both and much prefer the F4s. I can't tell you why. It just feels better in the hands.
The fact that his "status" doesn't show as either member or subscriber (or anything else for that matter) is a clueAnyone know what happened to him?
The Nikon F5 is the one.....Fitted mine with a 24-120 D lens, this combo works a treat for me, for general everyday photography it is great
A f5 is no heaver than a F2 with a MD2 and batt pack, the metering is very very good:- stick the thing in full auto, shoot a roll and you get a perfect set of negs all exposed the same.
The only bad points are that it uses batt power when turned off, standard alkaline don't last long you need to use lithium batt's and take out the holder when not in use, when buying one make sure the batt holder is not corroded as they are no longer available new from nikon
Johnkpap
I still have my Nikormat FT3 but haven't used it in years having stuck with medium format. But the weight is getting to me and I'm thinking of messing around with the lighter 35mm Nikormat. How does it line up with the F4, F5 and F6? Should I bother considering these against the Nikormat?
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