
It is a great camera for the demanding, traveling film photographer. The good thing is that it is smaller and lighter than new DSLRs (e.g. This is hard to describe, but when you pick it up to try it, you’ll understand what I mean. It does not handle and feel like a contemporary DSLR, though. Its controls are easy to understand and when paired with Nikon AF-D or newer lenses, it is a solid tool and even up to professional tasks. The Nikon F100 is a camera that you can take out of the box and start shooting with. This might hamper compatibility with new, third-party flashes. Again, I have to draw a comparison to the Nikon F6, which is far superior regarding metering.Īlthough it makes use of advanced TTL flash metering, it is important to note that this is not Nikon’s i-TTL system, but the predecessor.
