nikon d3200 vs nikon d3300 - GADGET
Nikon Service Advisories for the Z5ii, Z6iii, and Zr; Zr Firmware 1.11 By ShunCheung, March 17 1 reply 201 views ShunCheung March 18 Nikon F3 with motor drive MD-4. The Nikon F3, introduced in 1980, is considered one of the great SLR classics. Built to the highest standards, durable, reliable, almost entirely made of metal, embedded in arguably the largest system program for an SLR, and produced for 21 years.
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It's no wonder th... The Nikon engineers could have labeled then R1, R2, R3, and R4. When you set the ring to R4 it means that if you shoot at f/4 you will get optimum sharpness on your subject and background bokeh at this setting. Setting it above or below will start to affect the sharpness of the subject.
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Yes, Nikon's 35-70 has a very good reputation, but the 28-70 will of course give you a bit longer range of focals so, if optically similar, I would opt for the Tokina. I don't know about the Tokina (though I am looking into getting the 12-24) but don't overlook the Tamron 28-75/2.8. A very, very good mid-range zoom. How safe is it to use the Leica SF20 flash on Nikon FM2n? I have a Vivitar 283 for my Nikon, which is although more powerful, I am tempted to use the SF20 flash on the Nikon also, having seen its performance on the M6TTL.
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I am little scared to try (for the risk of damaging the flash and/or the Ni... I like the SB-28 and SB-28dx even more.<P>The Nikon Speedlights from the SB-23 forward will all work fine with the F4s, The warning about the Sb-24 and the 20mm lens combination is because the flash doesn't have the built in wide angle lens on the flash -- which the SB-25, SB26, SB27, SB28, SB28dx, SB50dx and SB80dx do have. Does anyone have any info on the differences and relative speeds of the various Nikon autofocus systems. I have a N70 - CAM 274. I was looking at the N80 and D70 - CAM 900 and F100 Cam 1300 (also in F5). I noticed some of the newer cameras have a CAM 2000 system.
You can mount ANY Nikon SLR lens on a Nikkormat camera, and take pictures with it. The Nikkormat FT, FTN, FT2, and EL use the "prong" to communicate the aperture setting of the lens to the camera, for use in metering. Modern AF lenses, and older Series E lenses don't have prongs, so they won't couple to the Nikkormat's meter. You have to use "stop down" metering with them.