Fraser
Well-known
F4 is too heavy for me. I'll stick with F3, thanks!
Now, about that shiny black Nikon F though...
F4s 1.26kg
F3p (with drive) 1.28kg
😀
Without batteries
F4 is too heavy for me. I'll stick with F3, thanks!
Now, about that shiny black Nikon F though...
I did own an F4 but sold it when I bought my first F5 and don't miss it much. They're very solid cameras with a good light meter but I found the shape a bit unwieldy and, in comparison with modern cameras, the autofocus is slow and somewhat hit and miss.
F4s 1.26kg
F3p (with drive) 1.28kg
😀
Without batteries
Okay.
How about: F4 feels bulky to me 😀
The F3 feels slim even with the MD-4 tacked at the bottom, which is how I prefer using it.
How about Lithium AA Batteries?Pretty much any 1.2-1.5V AA (plus the rechargeable block for the MB-23 and anything you can wire up to the MB-22 or MB-23 external inputs).
The MB-21 has a battery gauge with alkaline and NiCd marks, and the latter has proved to be accurate for NiMH as well (Nikon originally advised against NiMH as they were too low current, but current ones are a match for the best late eighties NiCd AA's). The MB-20 way of checking batteries (by way of the self timer control light) does only work with alkalines - while it works fine with current NiMH (at least with Eneloops), you cannot determine in advance how soon the batteries will fail.
How about Lithium AA Batteries?
BTW does anyone know how many rolls one gets using alkaline. I have the MB20 with only 4 batteries. But any answer will help.Lithium batteries can safely be used in the F4, if they output 1.5 volt. From what I understand, early lithium's were 1.7 volt and so were not recommended.
BTW does anyone know how many rolls one gets using alkaline. I have the MB20 with only 4 batteries. But any answer will help.