Nikon F batteries

KevinVH

Nikonian!
Local time
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Joined
Aug 26, 2012
Messages
198
Location
Antwerp, Belgium and Cuenca, Ecuador
Hi everyone.

I'm receiving my Nikon F with FTN from KEH. I'm not sure if they included batteries. I'm living in Ecuador and want to buy the batteries. From what I understand it takes 1.3 volt which aren't available anymore. What type of batteries should I go look for?
 
There is an alkaline 625 (625A) that should be available from a camera store -- 1.5V, so just compensate by setting your film speed one stop slower (so, ISO 200 if using 400 speed film, for example).
 
I have a few Nikon Fs with metered prism and found after a while I could guesstimate the exposure better they are all getting a bit old to be that accurate, so I wouldn't worry to much about the battery.
 
Well I'll take a look at the 625a, I also found 675 should work? I'm going out now to see if I can find the batteries. I'll let you guys now! I'm pretty confident using the Sunny16 rule, but it would be nice to have an old camera that's fully functional.
 
The Photomic meter head uses a bridge circuit which is generally insensitive to battery voltage. A silver cell or alkaline should be fine.

Cheers,
Dez
 
Well the thing is I live in Ecuador, and getting anything shipped here costs me a ridiculous amount of money. Even for a roll of film I have to pay the national postservice 11 dollars and wait 3 weeks for it to go through customs etc.. So I'd rather look at something I can make myself ( some kind of duct tape contraption) or some type of available battery that requires a little different metering. I went to the local photostore last saturday but they didn't have 675 oR 625 batteries. I'll go look for those at some other places..
 
What I do not know is whether a 675 will work without the need for a spacer, given its smaller size. I forget where the contacts are in the battery compartment. Certainly it's the correct voltage. A metal washer around the 675 battery will do the trick, though I forget the size -- something tells me it's a #9? The outside diameter of a 675 battery is 11mm, so the washer would need an 11mm inside diameter. Washer outside diameter is 15mm -- that's the outside diameter of a 625 battery.
 
The 675 is smaller in each dimension (11.6x5.4mm vs 16x6.2mm), so it can be trivially adapted - you can usually ignore the half millimetre of height difference, as the battery compartment spring will account for it. A bit of 16mm wide plastics tube with 2mm wall strength would do the job on cameras that have a contact on both top and bottom. For the Nikon F you will need machined brass adapters matching the (somewhat odd, stepped) outer shape of the 625, as its battery compartment uses a edge contact tab.
 
I don't know. There sometimes are Chinese or Hong Kong sellers of these adapters on ebay - mine were less than 10€ for the pair, plus 0.70€ for the shipping to Germany. And there ought to be some mechanic with a lathe in town.
 
What I do not know is whether a 675 will work without the need for a spacer, given its smaller size. I forget where the contacts are in the battery compartment. Certainly it's the correct voltage. A metal washer around the 675 battery will do the trick, though I forget the size -- something tells me it's a #9? The outside diameter of a 675 battery is 11mm, so the washer would need an 11mm inside diameter. Washer outside diameter is 15mm -- that's the outside diameter of a 625 battery.

The upper contact is on the side in a FTN. That's why you need a ring on the 675 cell. They are just a ring. Perhaps a piece of copper wire around the cell would work. It needs to be kept centered and contact the side contact, that's all.
 
Well I still haven't received the camera yet since it's a birthday gift, and my birthday is due next Wednesday. I'll go look for the 675 batteries and see if I can come up with something. If not I'll just wait until I can get the adapters, but I don't feel like paying 5 dollars for something online to have it shipped to Miami, to my PO box, where I have to pay a 11 dollars to get it shipped here, after 3 or 4 weeks of going through national customs here.
 
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