The
Nikon F3
by Mike Graham

username Merlin
Nikonian in Germany
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INTRODUCTION
There
have been so many rave reviews of this superb camera that
my adding one here would be pointless. It's enough to say
I've used them heavily since 1984, I have one of my own, and
if it ever broke I'd replace it with another without a second
thought.
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Very
few folks would argue with me if I said that this is the finest
manual Nikon ever built, bar none!
This
is the Mercedes Benz S-Class of manual cameras, and I've used
them for recording about five hundred forensic autopsies.
Our elderly Nikon F3s have probably sent more murderers, rapists
and child abusers to jail than any other cameras! Gunshot
wounds, stab wounds, strangulation lesions, nothing escaped
the F3's on-the-money metering system. I've even testified
in court on the accuracy of this camera!
Minor
wish list: I wish it would synchronize with flash at a faster
speed, like the FM2. I wish Nikon had either left off the
tiny illuminator button, or made it work properly. I also
wish I could have another one for Christmas...
UNBREAKABLE AND COMBAT TESTED
This
is the least pretty of the two F3s we have at work. Our oldest
F3, serial number 1625513, has been used continuously since
1983 by US Army photographers.
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Now, soldiers don't actually perform
rifle drill with our Nikons and slam the butts down
onto the parade ground when they come to attention,
but to judge by the number of scrapes and the bare
patches of metal showing through the paint you'd
think this one had done a season as a hockey puck!
The
light seals are still good, the mirror pad is undamaged,
and needless to say everything works like new -
all shutter speeds are accurate, the meter is still
on the money and the automatic is still reliable. |
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Most
of its life was spent attached to the motor drive, and the
little drive cap's missing, covered with black tape. One clown
even went to power rewind a film, put it down to answer the
phone, and left the room forgetting the camera which continued
rewinding the film until the NiCad on the motor expired some
time during the night! (You see what I'm up against here?)
When
I started here back in 1984, we still had an F with a few
non-AI lenses. They can be used in stop-down mode on the F3,
but the little metering connector around the bayonet has to
be flipped out of the way first to avoid squashing it between
the lens and the body. If I got a dollar for every time a
soldier did that, or another for every time it's been dropped...
After
an autopsy or before going in to surgery, camera equipment
gets cleaned off with alcohol, and scrubbed hard. The leatherette
is still firmly in place.
Today
we have no more military photographers, and most photography
gets done with a D1. But this F3 sits proudly and patiently
on my desk, a 55mm Micro Nikkor in place, with a roll of Ektachrome
loaded, ready to rock-n-roll at a second's notice, just like
the old days.
It
could tell you some horror stories of all the sights it's
seen, of the murder victims it's recorded. Of nights in the
operating theater, of grueling, sweaty battles on a copy stand,
of thousands of Kodalith slides. Of the icy mud of field training
exercises in bitter German winters, of the blistering heat
of the Persian Gulf during Desert Storm. Of sand and rain,
sweat and dirt. Of the spine-jarring vibration of a UH60 MEDEVAC
helicopter. No car I've ever owned has been as reliable. In
my hands, it feels as comfortable as an old pair of gloves,
and I can reload it in the dark purely by feel. It has never
failed me, and like an old friend, never will.
It
really is the finest 35mm manual SLR ever built.
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