A Nikonians product review

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Available since June 1996 | Single area AF and Dynamic AF | 5 AF sensors | 1005 pixels 3D Color Matrix Metering | 8 fps | 1/8000 - 30s | ISO 6 - 6400 | 1210 grams - 45.7 oz | Street price brand new ~2,000 USD

The Nikon F5
by Bo Stahlbrandt


username: bgs
Nikonian in Germany

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» Introduction
  Why an F5 is interesting for amateur use
  You don't brake a shoulder
  Metal & rubber - the handling in general
  The controls - the handling in detail
  The command dials
  The silly push buttons
  The mechanical ones
  The LC-Displays
  The autofocus
  The exposure metering system
  Power needs power
  Film transportation

Introduction

Most obviously the F5 is one of the killer SLR 35mm bodies on the market: 8 frames per second while autofocusing in-between letting the mirror dance at such a pace that your eye cannot see the dark pauses, 5 CPU's (3x16bit, 1x8bit and 1x4 bit), 4 coreless motors, a memory (ROM) capacity beating any camera before it, a self-diagnostic shutter designed for at least 150.000 operations all coming in an aluminum-alloy housing with a detachable viewer in titanium.

Click for enlargement and details
Aspens in Blue, Colorado. October 2004
Nikon F5, Nikkor AF 80-200/2.8D ED on Fujichrome Velvia 50

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OK, so much for the general goodies. Now, is this camera really as good as you're supposed to believe if you're listening to what Nikon and all the pro's using it say?

I'm a serious amateur, that is, I'm not making a living on photography; but I'm more or less well hooked since I was a kid. Probably (and theoretically), I might very well be able to shoot pictures having a similar quality using a 400 dollar body and a prime 50mm; sure, but there are indeed a whole bunch of features on this baby that have made my pic's getting an awful lot better since I started using it.

Ever wondered how the few, the great photographers of "our" time did it without all the nifty technical stuff we have today? Well, buy a used, manual body for 150 dollars, attach a 80 dollar prime 50mm/1.8, nail the window panes shut in that old, second bathroom of yours, throw out the hamburgers in the fridge, stuff it with 2000 rolls of Tri-X and a rich assortment of paper, get into the crowd down town while you're sticking to 1/125 and off you go. It's all in the mind-eye you know (and I'm not talking Canonic-45-Points-Eye-Focusing here). For all of us who don't feel that we could stand this, keep on reading.

In this review, I'll try to point out the pros (and the few cons) using this lovely piece of engineering art coming out in the slim body model named "F5" - as seen through the eyes of an amateur.

There are several, more or less good, F5 reviews on the net, but they're seldom viewing the camera through the eyes of the amateur who uses it. Sure, it is a professional body, but I really believe that there are a whole lot of people out here that might be thinking of getting an F5, not being pro's, but rather ambitious amateurs. This review is for all of you.

  More...»
see also

F5 Hands on
F5 Users Group forum
Nikkor AF S 17-35mm/2.8 ED IF


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