![Using the Nikon F4S Using the Nikon F4S](http://web.archive.org./web/20110209033955im_/http://i.ytimg.com/vi/MXVboWOvjtU/0.jpg)
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- Duration: 10:05
- Published: 2010-09-19
- Uploaded: 2010-12-24
- Author: ScottWBaker
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The Nikon F4 was a 35mm autofocus (AF) single lens reflex (SLR) film camera, first introduced in 1988 as the next generation in Nikon's line of F series professional cameras. With industrial design by Giorgetto Giugiaro, the F4 was the first professional Nikon to offer autofocus and is able to accept any of Nikon's manual focus (MF) or AF lenses from 1959 to the present day, including the two F3AF lenses (in Autofocus mode). The F4 replaced the F3, which was a manual focus camera produced from 1980 until around the year 2000. Nikon introduced its next flagship model, the F5, in 1996. All F4 models were discontinued soon after, in May 1997.
Its controls were transitional between those of mechanical SLRs and future professional film and digital SLRs: the F4's electronics, LCD viewfinder display, autofocus, programmed auto-exposure, and evaluative light metering looked to the future, but it also retained classic dedicated analog dials for shutter speed, lens aperture, metering pattern, and exposure compensation.
The F4 was the first Nikon F-series camera to lack a manual film-advance lever, though it offered both motor-driven and manual film rewinding. Like previous F-series cameras, the F4 featured a high degree of customization to specific tasks, with various remote controls, film backs, and viewfinders available. While it was a complex camera with over 1700 parts, the F4's high-quality mechanical and electronic components, as well as weather sealing and tough construction, made for a reliable and long-lived professional SLR.
Its lack of electronic aperture control limits the F4's functionality with G-series lenses, which do not have a mechanical aperture ring. With these lenses, exposure control is limited to program and shutter-priority modes. In addition, DX lenses are not designed to cover the full 35mm frame and will vignette when used with the F4 (or any other 35mm camera). The F4 also provides no support for Nikon's later VR (Vibration Reduction) system; VR-equipped lenses will mount and function, but without image stabilization.
{| class="wikitable" |+ |- ! model !! battery pack !! introduced !!advance speed !! batteries !! features |- ! F4 | MB-20 || 1988 || 4.0 frame/s || 4 AA || most compact |- ! F4S | MB-21 || 1988 || 5.7 frame/s|| 6 AA || vertical shutter release |- ! F4E | MB-23 || 1991 || 5.7 frame/s|| 6 AA or Ni-Cd (MN-20) || largest pack, vertical shutter release, 250 exposure Bulk Film Multi-Control Back MF-24 terminal |}
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