ashishtamhane
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 476
- Name
- Ashish Tamhane
- Edit My Images
- Yes
24mm, 35mm, 50mm and 85mm AF-Dwhat lenses are you intending to use with the F60?
24mm, 35mm, 50mm and 85mm AF-Dwhat lenses are you intending to use with the F60?
So I just got the F60 delivered and it has a heavy front focusing issue. Checking with the supplier if they can replace it with another similar body. Guess my film camera body experience has just started?
It’s plain through the viewfinder. Diopter adjustment makes it worse.I'm intrigued to know how you tested it so quickly, or was that plain through the viewfinder? Is there doptre adjustment, and have you set it up for yourself?
Yeah let’s see where I end up with this., but if you want a Nikon SLR the manual focusing on the Nikon non AF SLR cameras is so easy,
Yeah let’s see where I end up with this.
So I set the focus marker on the lens to infinity and it’s still blurred in the viewfinder. Infinity comes into focus at about the 7 to 10 feet marker.
Viewfinder or focusing screen issue?
I have various D lenses and a 135mm manual focus lens.do you have a manual focus lens?
The F60 was good enough for my needs but this particular model seems to have an issue with the focusing screen. I am returning it for a F90x.I guess if you want autofocus your going to have to choose between cheap and platic or a more pro level model that's going to be a lot dearer. I later had an F100 which was a much nicer camera to hold and use.
Yes it is. It feels not old honestly.That looks very nice. Is it the actual one you bought? I assume you know that you will need the electronic release if you use the camera on a tripod. The original Nikon ones are getting hard to find, but there are after market ones (sold be Wex) that do the job for less than half the price.
Yes it is. It feels not old honestly.
Although I don’t think I will be using this on a tripod why is it so?
My head knows you're right, my heart says see, frame, meter, focus, breathe, take, move!There is an old story about lens quality. One of the main reasons why people claim a lens s 'not up to much' is due to camera shake. Whenever I can use a tripod conveniently, I use one. (Manfrotto 99B) Even a budget lens will give you surprisingly sharp images just because it is being held still on a tripod and a traditional cable or modern electronic release is used.
Nikon AF-D lenses are pretty much sharp for me.There is an old story about lens quality. One of the main reasons why people claim a lens s 'not up to much' is due to camera shake. Whenever I can use a tripod conveniently, I use one. (Manfrotto 99B) Even a budget lens will give you surprisingly sharp images just because it is being held still on a tripod and a traditional cable or modern electronic release is used.
Some Nikon lenses are not well thought of such as the 24/120 F3.5/5.6
You can get rid of the 'stickyness' by wiping the affected parts gently with a soft cloth moistened with Isopropyl Alcohol. Let it dry - it will only take seconds and do it again and let it dry properly. I have done this with both F80's and F100's and the stickyness rarely returns.I have a F80, New in box, but I think it's gone all sticky - plus my user F80 which is black, but same problem
![]()
Some Nikon lenses are not well thought of such as the 24/120 F3.5/5.6 and the 24/85 F2.8. I don't have a comparison for the latter but the first lens was actually quite poor and not really sharp at any focal length or aperture The F4 constant aperture version is something quite different, but costs about 3 times as much! I bought a used one and it cost more than a new, but less well specified 3.5/5.6 version. It is the best lens I have.
The 70/300 AFD was an oddity as well. Mostly they are sharp but you will find that at certain focal lengths/apertures there will be patches of the image that are seemingly out of focus or to describe it correctly where parts of 'the image gets distorted' compared to the rest of the frame. It can be very noticeable when straight lines are in the frame. Oddly though it is apparently the same optical design as a Tamron 70/300 F3,5/5.6 ED from about 15 years ago which didn't appear have the same problem!
The much older 'E' series manual focus lenses were not considered to be very good either. I have used a couple of them (35mm and 135mm) and had no problem. Lighter in weight certainly and lighter on the wallet as well. It seems this reputation came about because it was 'rumoured' that not all of the internal elements were coated.