N80 Nikon. Nikon N80 35mm Camera Body at KEH Camera The only sort of controls on the front are the exposure dial, the focusing type. The Nikon N80 has a lot of similarities to the Nikon F100, including 5 focus points, great matrix metering, ability to change ISO, P, A, S, and M settings if you like the options of having more auto-exposure abilities, single image, burst, hot shoe, multiple exposure, self-timer, front and rear dials, and fits AF-S lenses.
Nikon N80 Nikon N80 film SLR Gem Flickr from www.flickr.com
Nikon N80 35mm SLR Film Camera with 28-80mm Nikkor Lens (Broken Latch Back Door) Opens in a new window or tab The Nikon N80 (or "F80" to the rest of the world outside of the USA) was one of the last film SLR's that Nikon made, being produced from 2000 thru 2006
Nikon N80 Nikon N80 film SLR Gem Flickr
The N80 was introduced in February 2000 and was the best 35mm film camera for serious amateur photographers until those amateurs went digital The Nikon N80 has a lot of similarities to the Nikon F100, including 5 focus points, great matrix metering, ability to change ISO, P, A, S, and M settings if you like the options of having more auto-exposure abilities, single image, burst, hot shoe, multiple exposure, self-timer, front and rear dials, and fits AF-S lenses. The N80 was introduced in February 2000 and was the best 35mm film camera for serious amateur photographers until those amateurs went digital
Vintage Camera Review Nikon N80 (Nikon F Mount). The F50/N50 was remarkably featureless, the F60/N60 had the nagging problem of hiding what it was doing (like switching to center-weighted metering when you pressed the exposure lock button!), the F65/N65 doesn't allow use of older AI-S lenses, and the F70/N70 featured a funky user interface and lacked depth of field preview. About $50 used if you know How to Win at eBay or at Amazon
Nikon N80 35mm Camera Body at KEH Camera. The N80 was introduced in February 2000 and was the best 35mm film camera for serious amateur photographers until those amateurs went digital By the time it was introduced, the march toward digital cameras was already well underway