My Undying Affection Towards The Nikon F2

This whole thread put me in mind of something.

When I was a young photographer, I thought the equipment made all the difference and I sought "better" cameras and lenses.

When I was a bit more photographically mature, I thought that the equipment didn't matter. I aspired to be an artist, by golly, and artists do good work, notwithstanding the equipment.

Now with the benefit of ... uhm ... plenty of time I've come to understand that equipment is like paintbrushes. Different brushes are appropriate for different situations.

But more importantly, I've come to understand that cameras, for lack of a better term, have a "soul". When you use an Nikon F, or a Leica M film body, a Hasselblad or a great field camera, its "soul" is influencing how you work. I shoot very differently with a Leica than I do a Nikon, and differently again with a Hassy.

It seems to me, this comes from two sources. First there is the objective reality of how the machine in question is built and how it is used. The silkiness of a Leica or the jaw dropping sharpness of a Hassy lens are a matter of design and construction.

But I think it's also the case that our history with a given machine also deeply influences how we use these. Our atavisms for a given machine appear to strongly influence how we work and what we prefer to use. There is no way on earth I could objectively defend owning a Photomic FtN - I have much more recent examples of Nikon film bodies at my disposal. It's certainly not "better" that my Leica film bodies, just different. But the F was the first "professional" camera I owned in my youth. It was part of what launched a 50 year love affair with photography and couldn't imagine selling my most recent copy.

The paintbrush you choose - the one with which you most resonate - profoundly affects how you work.
 
I had an F2H pass through recently. Basically an F2T body with a fixed mirror for high speed ( released for the 1984 olympics.) This was well after the F2 had ceased production.
 
Is there a difference in weight?
The body and the viewfinder itself must be lighter, because Titanium have a lower specific gravity than brass.
BUT the back panel is a tiny little bit heavier, because the ordinary back panel is made of aluminum, and aluminum is lighter than titanium.
Aluminium ~ 2,7 g/cm³
Titanium ~ 4,5 g/cm³
Brass ~ 8,8 g/cm³
always depending on alloy

But to be honest, I've never weighed the cameras.
 
The body and the viewfinder itself must be lighter, because Titanium have a lower specific gravity than brass.
BUT the back panel is a tiny little bit heavier, because the ordinary back panel is made of aluminum, and aluminum is lighter than titanium.
Aluminium ~ 2,7 g/cm³
Titanium ~ 4,5 g/cm³
Brass ~ 8,8 g/cm³
always depending on alloy

But to be honest, I've never weighed the cameras.
Interesting! Thanks for the reply.
 
I presume Brian does since he's got the best Nikon collection I'm aware of 🙂
No- I came close. My favorite salesman from Penn camera called me "decades ago" had one in. Got there- the manager promised it to someone else.
I settled for an F3AF, DX-1, DE-3, MD-4, MF-14 for $500. They felt bad, wanted to make it up to me. Included boxes.

When the F2 Titanium was new, bought one for work. To sit in a vacuum chamber taking X-Ray pictures using a Pin-Hole lens of plasma type reactions. Controlled Nuclear Fusion. Camera lost to the ages.
 
I had an F2H pass through recently. Basically an F2T body with a fixed mirror for high speed ( released for the 1984 olympics.) This was well after the F2 had ceased production.
I got to hold one for a few minutes on a visit to the Nikon House in Rockefeller Center years ago. I lusted after it as it would allow me to see what I got at night when I was using off camera flash. Didn't do it enough to justify even when we were DINKs.

B2 (;->
 
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