A Nikonians product review
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Announced in 2004 | Auto Focus | 1005pixel 3D Color Matrix Metering, Center-Weighted and Spot Metering | 5.5 fps, 8 fps with motor drive | 1/8000 to 30 seconds shutter | ISO 6 to 6400 | 34.4 oz / 975 grams | Street price ~2,200 USD when brand new, body only

Nikon F6: First Look
by Jeremy Bourassa


username balls007
Nikonian in Canada

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» First Look
  First Look .. continues
  Specifications

FIRST LOOK

Well, just got back from a show in Ottawa where Nikon representatives let me play with an F6!
 
Click for a large F4 image   Click for enlargement of the Nikon F6 with motor drive
The Nikon F6 with motor drive

I've heard some mumbling about people thinking this is a digital based body and people wondering if it was worth it. Answer yes its digital based and yes it is worth it.

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The body is virtually identical to that of a D2H or D2x, but with a built-in data back instead of an LCD and digital menu controls. Basically, Nikon has taken an amazing camera and given it a boost in some key areas that to a pro -unlike myself- would be pure unadulterated haven.

I'll list a couple of really cool things it does that make me drool -bearing in mind I know very little about cameras and have only owned a Nikon for 6 months.

  • First, it is very silent; like it doesn't make a sound at all. Continuous Silent mode, up to 1 fps is barely audible to the human ear. Mate it with any silent wave lens and you could be a foot away from the priest in a church and get the shot the second they say I do. Not to mention the impact it could have on nature photography.
  © Alwin Heijmans
  • Accuracy. They have added a shutter monitoring system so that if it ever gets cold, hot, humid, damp or you find yourself in the ninth pit of hell, it automatically does an exposure compensation if it detects any deviation in the speed of the Kevlar shutter screen.
  © Alwin Heijmans
  • Unbelievable balance. The motors and internal setup fell like half the weight of the power of the F5. How major balancing was done on all moving parts so that things could work together instead of against each other, is amazing.
  © Alwin Heijmans
More ...»
see also

The F4/F5/F6 Users Group forum 
Film SLR Bodies Comparative Chart
"The DOF Tool" - The Nikonians Hyperfocal T-Shirt
Resources
What they say about Nikonians
What they say about the Nikonians Photo Pro Shop


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