Review by Paul Wilson. © 2006.
Background
I got serious about photography
about 3 years ago after a trip to Europe with point and
shoot camera. There were so many great things there to photograph,
and the P&S did such a bad job capturing them, I decided
to get a good camera.
I bought a Nikon N6006, which
I still have, mostly because my father has about 10 Nikkor
lenses that I can borrow. After about a year of photographing
as much as possible and reading books by people like John
Shaw, I decided I wanted another body. One with depth of
field preview, mirror lock up, and batteries that didn't
cost a fortune and die after 15 rolls, so an F3 it was.
I also got a killer deal on a DA-2 Action finder at a used
photo show, so I was forced to buy an F3 to stick under
it.
My F3/T is actually my second
F3. I found it in my local Want-Ads for $600 a couple of
months ago and decided I had to have it.
Why a manual focus body?
One of the nicest things about
the Nikon system is that one can use manual focus bodies
with all the current lenses. The preferred MF bodies are
the F3HP, FM2, FE2, or F2. All these bodies have mirror
lock-up, depth-of-field preview and are very rugged. They
are also great when it's cold and need no batteries for
long exposures (the FM2 and F2 need no batteries at all).
I think an N90s and one of these is an ideal combo.
It's Rugged
As mentioned, I have the titanium
version of the F3. While the regular F3HP is very, very
rugged, the F3/T is undentable as far as I can tell. The
top and bottom plates, prism housing and back are all titanium.
On most camera you can push the back in a bit with thumb
pressure. On the newer poly-carb bodies, you could probably
break the back if you grunted hard enough. If you push on
the back of the F3/T there is no flex whatsoever. The camera
feels like a solid block of metal, yet it is lighter than
the regular F3.
If you need to shoot in extreme
cold, get the FM2 or F2. Both are completely mechanical
and legend has it that they will never give out in the cold.
That said, I've used my F3 while skiing at Sunday River
in Maine on a day when they closed the mountain early due
to the cold. No problem despite the -20F temperature (without
wind-chill). Whichever one you get, if you don't like it
you can probably sell it for what you paid and get the other.
It's a Nikon F camera
Nikon F series cameras have
a well-deserved reputation for quality. They are all extremely
well made and have shutters that will last forever (150,000
cycle MTBF). All have DOF preview, MLU, 100% finders, and
interchangeable prisms and screens.
The F3HP also has the "high
eyepoint" finder which, for eyeglass wearers, is indispensable.
Speaking of finders, I also
own the DA-2 Action Finder. If you've never seen one, it's
a huge prism with a 1.5" diagonal opening that gives about
1.5" of eye-relief. It's like watching one of those hand-held
LCD tv's. The DA-2 is very helpful in certain situations
like macro work where you don't want to disturb the camera.
The one downside with it is side-lighting can make seeing
into the finder difficult. It almost needs a focusing hood
but overall the DA-2 is a lot of fun.
As for screens, I like one
with a grid. If you decide you need a brighter screen, the
F4 screens will fit but I find them harder to focus. The
F4 and F3 screens are exactly the same size but the frames
are somewhat different. The F4 screen's frame will fit in
the F3, but it will be more solid if you put the F4's screen
in an F3 frame.
They could have done
better
The downsides to the F3 are
few but the one that stands out is the slow flash sync shutter
speed of 1/80 sec. This can made outdoor fill flash difficult.
Speaking of flash, the oddball hotshoe means the F3 is incompatible
for TTL flash with flashes designed for other Nikon cameras.
(Note: the FE-2 and FM-2 sync at 1/250 sec; the highest
of any mechanical focal plane shutter.)
Another inconvenience is the
lack of exposure lock while the mirror is locked up. If
you lock the mirror up in Aperture Priority mode, light
will stop falling on the meter cell and therefore the camera
sets an inappropriately long shutter speed (close to its
maximum of 30 seconds).
I'd also like to see manually
settable shutter speeds to 30 seconds in 1/2 or 1/3 stop
increments (instead of 8 seconds in full stop increments),
a spot meter, and low-light metering capabilities like the
Pentax LX.
Buy it used
A new F3HP is about $1200
at B&H Photo while the F3/T is about $1600, but since
it's a Nikon, the used market is huge. An F3HP in mint shape
can be found on the used market for about $750 while one
in used but decent shape can be had for about $550. F3/Ts
are both rare and expensive but occasionally one turns up
at a good price. Avoid ones with dents, huge amounts of
brassing, finger nail marks in the shutter and general bad
appearance. I'd also avoid any camera that may have been
used by a photojounalist. You don't know where it's been.
I don't own one but the MD-4
motor drive sells for $200 to $250 used depending on condition.
The MD-4 can also help handling while hand-holding lenses
like an 80-200/2.8. You'll also start bulking up if you
use this combo enough.
Overall
The F3T is quiet, rugged,
light and compact (without the motor drive), and a serious
professional tool.
Specs
Construction: Cast Aluminum
with brass top, bottom and prism (Titanium for /T version)
Shutter: Titanium, speeds
from 8sec. to 1/2000 + T and B, 1/80 flash sync
Meter: 80/20 center weighted,
EV1-19, ISO 25-6400 (sort of like a big spot meter); metered-manual
or aperture-priority autoexposure
Available finders: Action
finder, Waist Level, 6x Magnifying and standard HP finder.
Motor Drive: MD-4 with speeds
up to 6fps with Nicad battery pack.
Features: MLU, DOF preview,
multi-exposure, many interchangeable screens
Batteries: two 1.55v silver
oxide batteries. Shutter works at 1/60 and in T mode when
battery is dead via mechanical backup release on camera
front. With the MD-4, the camera gets all battery power
from the drive.
Accessories: wireless remotes,
250-exposure backs, databacks and too many others to list.
Get a full line Nikon brochure.
Physical: with DE-3 HP finder,
camera is 148.5mm(W)x101.5mm(H)x69mm(D) and weight is 760g
www.nikon.com