Great video. I also buy old gear from Japanese sellers on Ebay. They are accurate with descriptions & I haven’t been disappointed with a purchase yet. I like to pick up old DSLR’s at least 10 years old that were tops in their era. Best purchase was a D700 for $25 some years ago. The seller couldn’t get the CF card in the slot & only changed postage. Turns out one of the pins was bent. I straightened it and bingo an $800 savings. The Nikon gear I have will see me out. The hunt for great gear at low prices is addictive. I love it and it has resulted in trying a range of Nikon DSLR’s I otherwise wouldn’t have the opportunity to experience. The images are great & taking an older unit & a couple of lenses around Asia has been fantastic. Knowing what I paid for them takes the pressure off when in tropical & hot places. Expensive new gear would be too precious in these conditions. Once again great video & us old fella’s tend to be a bit more practical than some others who pay the earth for the latest and most expensive. After all the results are in the images. I don’t need all the bells and whistles.
Well Myron, here I am on a quiet Saturday morning and the first thing I bring up is this video. It was as if I sat down with an old friend and reaffirmed what is right with life. I had to subscribe and leave my first ever comment on RUclips. I could very easily say many words of appreciation, but may I just say It was a soothing balm to the cheerleading hype most often found. I sincerely thank you for your time and effort to transcribe your love for this equipment and thie landscape. It does't hurt that I miss New Mexico and that my bag is filled with old AIS lenses. Best in all things.
Thanks for the video and the great images. Over the decades, I have owned and used Nikon F, F2, F3, F4, EM, N70, and N2000 Nikon 35mm film SLR bodies: In the late 1960s, I started buying Nikkor lenses to use on my Nikon 35mm film SLR bodies. My first lens was a 35mm f/2 My second lens was an 85mm f/1.8 Third lens was a 180mm f/2.8 Fourth lens was a 24mm f/2 Fifth lens was a 400mm f/5.6 Sixth lens was a 1000mm f/11 mirror Seventh lens was 14mm f/2.8 All, except for the 14mm, were manual focus lenses. To this day, except for the F and F3, I still own and use all the Nikon film bodies. The 35, 85, and 180 were pre-AI lenses that I had Nikon convert to AI. During the digital era, I used my lenses on a Fuji modified Nikon D200 (Fuji S5 Pro digital SLR). I also purchased 14-24mm f/2.8, 28-70mm f/2.8, and 80-200mm f/2.8 auto focus zoom lenses to use on my Nikon F-mount bodies.
The D810 although is a 10 year old camera, has an incredible image quality! These old lenses have more character than these ultra sharp ones being sold these days… try a 500 PF used (not too expensive and with an incredible quality)
Nice video on using old lenses on digital cameras. I have 27 Pentax lenses dating from 1957 to today. I like shooting with the old lenses as they are just as sharp as the new ones and the images have more character. I recently bought a D810 and 28-300 on eekBay and I have an M42 adapter so I can use my old Pentax screw mount lenses. Great fun!
while ago I almost bought the 600 f4, but I opted for the 500 f4 Ai-P, 3kgs vs the 6 of the 600. It was the last design of the large manuals, great lens,super sharp and "sort of " handholdable
I love my Nikon DSLRs and I got rid of my Z6 mirrorless as I just wasn't that impressed. I recently bought a 200mm f4 Auto Nikkor Q.C. for £60 U.K. ($75). It astonished me how good its images are.
@Cotictimmy. That 200mm f4.0 is a fantastic lens, super sharp, excellent contrast. The AI-S version is pretty compact as well. I started film photography in 1973 and always had one of these in my camera bag. I even modified one as a telescope using a binocular eyepiece with a focuser mounted on a rear lens cap. It is a super sharp, crisp star finder. Looking for an AI-S version to use on my D3000.
I totally failed to mention my f/3.5 55mm Micro-Nikkor-P-C, which until today was buried and forgotten. Truly a great lens. The plan is to use it to copy 6x6 negatives with the D810.
Nice video, really enjoyed it. I bought my first Nikon F in 1970 and a 105mm f2.5 lens to go with it for my photojournalism major. That was a sweet combination that served me well. I only succumbed to digital this year. Got a really decent Nikon D3000 for 78 bucks from Roberts Photo Pro and use a couple of DX and full frame lenses on it as well as a AI-S Nikkor zoom and a black beauty, the 135mm f3.5 AI-S. I use sunny 16 and gut instinct to figure aperture with old AI-S Nikkors because the D3000 doesn't have the non-CPU programming in the menu. Digital ain't so bad, but I do miss good old Tri-X film. Developing and hand printing is getting to be pretty expensive on my small pension and my old body doesn't want to be messing with chemicals in the darkroom anymore. Now that I dipped a toe in the digital pond, I plan on picking up a pro or semi pro used Nikon digital body and get out there to hunt down good photos with those great old Nikkor lenses. I really Iiked your video. It's nice to know I'm not the only old guy out there who still appreciates the old Nikon glass.
Ive been with Canon since 2012, but if I could go back, I would have saved up for a D810. I hear it has the best sensor. I just got the Nikkor 105 f2.5 AIS adapted to my Canon R8. It looks awesome. 🎉 Vintage glass is great. I have some Contax Zeiss and Zeiss Classics. I think RF glass is trash. The RF lenses worth using are at least $2-3K.
Great video. I also buy old gear from Japanese sellers on Ebay. They are accurate with descriptions & I haven’t been disappointed with a purchase yet. I like to pick up old DSLR’s at least 10 years old that were tops in their era. Best purchase was a D700 for $25 some years ago. The seller couldn’t get the CF card in the slot & only changed postage. Turns out one of the pins was bent. I straightened it and bingo an $800 savings.
The Nikon gear I have will see me out. The hunt for great gear at low prices is addictive. I love it and it has resulted in trying a range of Nikon DSLR’s I otherwise wouldn’t have the opportunity to experience. The images are great & taking an older unit & a couple of lenses around Asia has been fantastic. Knowing what I paid for them takes the pressure off when in tropical & hot places. Expensive new gear would be too precious in these conditions.
Once again great video & us old fella’s tend to be a bit more practical than some others who pay the earth for the latest and most expensive. After all the results are in the images. I don’t need all the bells and whistles.
Well Myron, here I am on a quiet Saturday morning and the first thing I bring up is this video. It was as if I sat down with an old friend and reaffirmed what is right with life. I had to subscribe and leave my first ever comment on RUclips. I could very easily say many words of appreciation, but may I just say It was a soothing balm to the cheerleading hype most often found. I sincerely thank you for your time and effort to transcribe your love for this equipment and thie landscape. It does't hurt that I miss New Mexico and that my bag is filled with old AIS lenses. Best in all things.
As a Nikon user for 30 years, your video let me feel like at home again. Thank you, Sir.
My pleasure!
I have and use many of these lenses, great video, thanks!
Thanks for the video and the great images.
Over the decades, I have owned and used Nikon F, F2, F3, F4, EM, N70, and N2000 Nikon 35mm film SLR bodies:
In the late 1960s, I started buying Nikkor lenses to use on my Nikon 35mm film SLR bodies.
My first lens was a 35mm f/2
My second lens was an 85mm f/1.8
Third lens was a 180mm f/2.8
Fourth lens was a 24mm f/2
Fifth lens was a 400mm f/5.6
Sixth lens was a 1000mm f/11 mirror
Seventh lens was 14mm f/2.8
All, except for the 14mm, were manual focus lenses.
To this day, except for the F and F3, I still own and use all the Nikon film bodies.
The 35, 85, and 180 were pre-AI lenses that I had Nikon convert to AI.
During the digital era, I used my lenses on a Fuji modified Nikon D200 (Fuji S5 Pro digital SLR).
I also purchased 14-24mm f/2.8, 28-70mm f/2.8, and 80-200mm f/2.8 auto focus zoom lenses to use on my Nikon F-mount bodies.
The D810 although is a 10 year old camera, has an incredible image quality! These old lenses have more character than these ultra sharp ones being sold these days… try a 500 PF used (not too expensive and with an incredible quality)
Nice video on using old lenses on digital cameras. I have 27 Pentax lenses dating from 1957 to today. I like shooting with the old lenses as they are just as sharp as the new ones and the images have more character. I recently bought a D810 and 28-300 on eekBay and I have an M42 adapter so I can use my old Pentax screw mount lenses. Great fun!
while ago I almost bought the 600 f4, but I opted for the 500 f4 Ai-P, 3kgs vs the 6 of the 600. It was the last design of the large manuals, great lens,super sharp and "sort of " handholdable
I love it. You are awesome, sir!
Beautiful images ...
I love my Nikon DSLRs and I got rid of my Z6 mirrorless as I just wasn't that impressed. I recently bought a 200mm f4 Auto Nikkor Q.C. for £60 U.K. ($75). It astonished me how good its images are.
@Cotictimmy. That 200mm f4.0 is a fantastic lens, super sharp, excellent contrast. The AI-S version is pretty compact as well. I started film photography in 1973 and always had one of these in my camera bag.
I even modified one as a telescope using a binocular eyepiece with a focuser mounted on a rear lens cap. It is a super sharp, crisp star finder.
Looking for an AI-S version to use on my D3000.
I totally failed to mention my f/3.5 55mm Micro-Nikkor-P-C, which until today was buried and forgotten. Truly a great lens. The plan is to use it to copy 6x6 negatives with the D810.
Great video with great info! Thank you!
Nice video, really enjoyed it. I bought my first Nikon F in 1970 and a 105mm f2.5 lens to go with it for my photojournalism major. That was a sweet combination that served me well.
I only succumbed to digital this year. Got a really decent Nikon D3000 for 78 bucks from Roberts Photo Pro and use a couple of DX and full frame lenses on it as well as a AI-S Nikkor zoom and a black beauty, the 135mm f3.5 AI-S. I use sunny 16 and gut instinct to figure aperture with old AI-S Nikkors because the D3000 doesn't have the non-CPU programming in the menu.
Digital ain't so bad, but I do miss good old Tri-X film. Developing and hand printing is getting to be pretty expensive on my small pension and my old body doesn't want to be messing with chemicals in the darkroom anymore.
Now that I dipped a toe in the digital pond, I plan on picking up a pro or semi pro used Nikon digital body and get out there to hunt down good photos with those great old Nikkor lenses.
I really Iiked your video. It's nice to know I'm not the only old guy out there who still appreciates the old Nikon glass.
Thanks much. Us geezers will abide!
Thank you for sharing, truly inspirational
Glad you enjoyed it!
Awesome!!
Ive been with Canon since 2012, but if I could go back, I would have saved up for a D810. I hear it has the best sensor. I just got the Nikkor 105 f2.5 AIS adapted to my Canon R8. It looks awesome. 🎉 Vintage glass is great. I have some Contax Zeiss and Zeiss Classics. I think RF glass is trash. The RF lenses worth using are at least $2-3K.
Thanks for sharing
You need to look around for how to pronounce the name..
"Najkon" 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️
No way. For me it will always be "N-eye-kon."