Nikon Lens
By Ryanita
These tables help figure out which lens does what on which camera. It’s not a table of camera features for selecting a camera. Cameras vary more than I can fit in a table. Want to know my recommendation for the most flexible film camera ever, and a steal at 2007′s used prices? Get an F4. It works with everything from 1959 through today with few exceptions.
As you’ve read at Nikon System Compatibility, it’s amazing how lenses and cameras made over all of Nikon’s SLR history often work just fine with each other. Not that you’d want to use them, since the 18-55mm II lens included with the D40 way outperforms the older lenses not only optically, but also offers autofocus, zooming and auto exposure, but if you have old lenses lying around, a big advantage of the Nikon system over any other is that many items, regardless of age, plug and play with the rest.
When a camera or lens is introduced, of course its manual can’t talk about compatibility with future products. For instance, my TC-16A autofocusing converted explicitly says it’s only compatible with the N2020, which was true when it came out in 1985, but it works great on my F4 and F6. The F5 manual says it works, too.
A Nikon lens is actually called a Nikkor camera lens although it is manufactured by Nikon to be used with their Nikon cameras. For the last 75 years, they have been making their own glass to be used in the fabrication of Nikon lens.
Nikon lens come in a huge variety such as wide-angle, standard, fisheye, telephoto, super telephoto, wide-angle zoom, standard zoom, high power zoom and close-up.
For decades the Nikon technology has been the vanguard of the camera industry, always delivering and fulfilling their promise of the most reliable quality. For instance, when you purchase a Nikon lens you can always rest assured that you should not only have the utmost confidence in the product, but also in the knowledge that Nikon stands behind that product through support that has the exact same high standards that were set for your lenses. Nikon frequently comes out with some very neat products, for instance in May, 2009 they brought photographers a wonderful wide angle option Nikon lens which was heralded as being exceptionally new to the world of photography. If you love wide-angle photography, you simply must take a look at this new lens.
Another very interesting example is when Nikon developed ED (Extra-low Dispersion) glass. They did this so that their lenses could offer better-quality sharpness as well as color correction by using a minimizing chromatic aberration.
You should know that chromatic aberration is a category of color and image dispersion that will occur when varying wavelength of light rays pass through optical glass. Every Nikon lens now uses this new technology.
Each time that Nikon lens introduces a new product such as the new wide-angle option Nikon lens, or lenses that use the newly developed ED glass, they totally exemplify Nikon’s outstanding supremacy in both lens innovation as well as performance.
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