Used Nikon F5 Camera
used nikon f5 camera

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Nikon F5 Film SLR Camera 50th Anniversay Model *MINT-* $2,139.00 |
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Nikon F5 35mm SLR Camera Body MINT $895.00 |
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Nikon F5 35mm SLR Film Camera Body Only $217.50 |
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Nikon F5 and F100 Camera checkup $15.00 |
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NIKON F5 USA model film camera with Nikon AF Nikkor lens,Flash Nikon speed light $590.00 |
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Nikon F5 35mm SLR Film Camera Body Only $200.00 |
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Nikon F5 35mm Camera Body MINT! +++ Almost Never Used $202.50 |
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Nikon F5 35mm SLR Film Camera Body Only $390.00 |
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Nikon F5 35mm SLR Film Camera,Nikkor 28-85 lens and Nikon Speedflash SB-28 $300.00 |
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Nikon F5 35mm SLR Film Camera Body Only $113.50 |
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NIKON F5 CAMERA, LENSE, FLASH & BAG $300.00 |
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Nikon F5 Film Camera w/ MF-28 Multi-Control Back $565.00 |
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Nikon N80 35mm SLR Film Camera & 2 autofocus lenses $260.00 |
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NIKON F5 AF 35mm SLR FILM CAMERA, Camera Body Only $91.00 |
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Lot of 2 Nikon SC-17 TTL Off-Camera Remte Flash Cord for F4 F5 SB28 Sb26 205686 $4.99 |
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mint NIKON F5 35mm SLR CAMERA MAGIC LANTERN GUIDE MANUAL INSTRUCTIONS BOOK $15.00 |
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Nikon F5 35mm SLR Film Camera Body Only $385.00 |
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Nikon F5 35mm SLR Film Camera Body Only $41.00 |
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Nikon F5 Camera Body 35mm $199.99 |
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Nikon F5 35mm SLR Camera + Nikkor AF-S 24-85mm Lens $599.99 |
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Nikon Camera checkup FE2,FM2,FM3a,F2,F3,F5,F100 $15.00 |
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Nikon F5 35mm SLR Film Camera w/ Nikon SB-28 Speedlight **Mint** $500.00 |
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NIKON F5 35mm SLR FILM CAMERA BODY W/ NIKON STRAP SUPERB CONDITION $399.99 |
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NIKON DX ZOOM NIKKOR 18-135mm F/3.5-5.6 AF-S ED IF G CAMERA LENS WORKS WITH F5 $174.99 |
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NIKON CF-54 CAMERA CASE FOR THE F-5 CAMERA & LENS OR D-90 DIGITL CAMERA $4.95 |
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genuine NIKON SLR CAMERA STRAP N90 F100 F4 F5 F6 D80 D90 D200 D300 D2x D3 D40 $9.99 |
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Nikon MF-27 Data Back for F5 camera MINT- $149.99 |
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genuine NIKON F5 35mm SLR CAMERA INSTRUCTIONS MANUAL GUIDE english version $15.00 |
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Nikon F5 35mm SLR Film Camera W/ SB-28, 28-105mm, and 35-70mm ( complete set ) $1.30 |
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Nikon Camera checkup and services FE2,FM2,FM3a,F2,F3,F5,F100 $15.00 |
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Nikon F5 Professional Film SLR Camera Body Free US Shipping $374.99 |
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Nikon F5 camera body with MF-28 Multi-Control Back $489.99
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Nikon F5 35MM SLR Camera Body & Strap in EXC+ condition – 3103037 $599.99 |
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Nikon F5 Film SLR Camera 50th Anniversay Model *EX+* $1,389.00 |
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Nikon F5 35mm SLR Film Camera Body with Nikon SB-28 Speedlight Flash $560.36 |
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Nikon F5 35mm camera w/nikon nikkor af 70-300 zoom G lens fits d3000/3100/5000.. $550.00 |
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Nikon SB-28 Speedlight – F5/F4/F100/N90 – 100% SOLID – QUALITY CAMERA PRIDE $129.95 |
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Nikon F5 35mm SLR Camera Body MINT $895.00 |
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NIKON F5 F 5 FLAGSHIP FILM SLR CAMERA BODY S/N : 3147073 $789.00 |
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Nikon F5 35mm SLR Film Camera Body Only #589 WARRANTY FREE SHIPPING $449.00 |
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NIKON F5 35MM SLR CAMERA BODY *EXC++ * $579.95 |
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*Mint* Nikon F5 top Professional SLR camera body 50th anniversary $1,399.00 |
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Nikon F5 High-Performance SLR Film Camera (#3101946) $469.00 |
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Nikon F5 35mm SLR Film Camera Body Only $399.00 |
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Used Nikon F5 SLR Camera Brochure – Japanese 1999.6.19 $109.99 |
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Nikon F5 35mm SLR Film Camera Body Only #053 WARRANTY FREE SHIPPING $449.00 |
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Nikon F5 Camera Laminated Custom Setting Pocket Guide Leaflet F-5 $7.76 |
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Sea & Sea NX-5 Pro Underwater Housing for Nikon F5 Film Camera NX 5 F 5 196318 $484.95 |
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NIKON F5 35MM SLR CAMERA BODY – SERIAL # 3206311 – *EXC++ * $599.95 |
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Nikon F5 35mm SLR Film camera $550.99 |
underexposed when my camera is in aperture priority and automatic flash setting?
I have a nikon d50 with SB-600 flash. I put my camera on “A” mode and set my flash on TTL BL and tried TTL. When I use a small aperture, I do not get a good exposure. I have also noticed this when I am not using the flash. I have never been able to figure out “A” mode. I thought I chose the aperture (be it if I want f22) and the camera chose the shutter speed. I am indoors and want a higher aperture (what I need a lot of things in focus), but it is underexposed. Why? When I used automatic the camera always uses f5 at 1/60 of a second. What if I don’t want a large aperture?
to sum it up, when I am indoors and using aperture priority mode I can only get the correct exposure when the aperture is large…even with my sb-600.
I can’t say for sure, but I suspect Nikon works the same as Canon in this regard.
Here’s how a Canon ETT-L flash works:
If you are shooting in Aperture priority mode on the camera, but ETTL on the flash, you set the aperture, the camera will set a shutter speed to properly expose the scene, and then flash for 1 stop underneath ambient. The reason it does this is that one only typically would use flash in aP mode outdoors, using the flash to fill in the shadows on a sunlit day. Flash filling one stop under ambient is a “classic” key/fill ratio.
If you shoot in manual on the camera, but ETTL flash, you set all of the camera’s exposure settings and the camera will attempt to use flash to fully light whatever you are metering from.
The point of this is that if Nikon is anything like Canon, full manual mode on the camera and ETTL is the most useful semi-automatic mode for indoor shooting. Aperture priority mode will still try to get ridiculously slow shutter-speeds in low light even with the flash enabled…
As other responses have noted, aperture and ISO will affect flash exposure, but shutter speed usually does not (unless you start getting near the max sync speed). This is because the flash is almost always MUCH faster than the shutter.
If you are actually shooting for f/22, you should realize two things:
One, f/22 is a HUGE strain on any flash unless you are very close to what you want to illuminate and/or shooting at high ISO. f/22 is a very small aperture, and lets VERY little light in.
Two, f/22 is not doing great things for the resolution of your lenses. While stopping down increases your depth of field, which can make a greater portion of the scene sharp, most 35mm lenses are optimized for either f/8 or f/11 (usually the former). Past these values, something called diffraction occurs, which causes a decrease in resolution. So you are trading depth-of-field for resolution… I find that even the best 35mm lenses are noticeably soft past f/16. The point is that you should only be stopping down past f/8-13 if you *need* the depth of field. Check out this site to see what settings you need to achieve your goals for keeping things in focus:
http://www.dofmaster.com/dofjs.html
If depth of field is a major concern, consider whether you could be using a shorter (wider angle) lens to achieve the shot. Telephotos give shallower depth of field than wide-angle lenses, so you won’t have to stop down as far on a WA.