Stopped by Goodwill this afternoon with my wife who wanted to look for some books.
Joe
(Good mechanical working order -- needs battery to check the meter).
Congrats, but I think they charged you too much.
To expensive.....lol.....
What is the cost of developing a 36 roll of film or slides these days, not to mention prints?
Ysarex wrote:
Stopped by Goodwill this afternoon with my wife who wanted to look for some books.
Joe
(Good mechanical working order -- needs battery to check the meter).
I would pay $2 to have that cool antique. My oldest daughter, who inherited my photography genes, uses my 1977 Nikon F2. She loves it!
What no lens! I’d return it.
Congratulations on a great find
I've had one (in black) for nearly 40 years, it still will produce photos that really reveal my lack of photographic skills. The most foolproof camera I have ever owned (I'm the fool it proofs). I never could get the filters down pat for the various artificial lighting scenarios. It made beautiful daylight photos In both color and black&white. One of these days I'll take it along to see if I have learned anything yet. Actually I liked the first one so well I got a second one about 30 years ago, just after I got an FE2. Wonderful cameras!
Congratulations!
Ysarex wrote:
Stopped by Goodwill this afternoon ...
I'm not into Nikons but I would have grabbed that one ... !
Bob (RLS)
Real photographers don't need no stinking light meters...I prefer my FM2 with a broken light meter and a 50mm f2 H lens... Congratulations on your amazing steal of a deal!
olemikey
Loc: 6 mile creek, Spacecoast Florida
Ysarex wrote:
Stopped by Goodwill this afternoon with my wife who wanted to look for some books.
Joe
(Good mechanical working order -- needs battery to check the meter).
I wouldn't have left it behind either....good score!!!
You may have a problem finding a battery. I had a Nikon FN and while I could find batteries that were the right diameter, the voltages were different. Perhaps someone at UHH knows a source for these batteries.
Online and most photo stores have the batteries.
The Nikon FE takes 2 S76 or 2 A76 cells, or 1 3v 2L44 battery.
The FE has a test light on the left near the top and you push the lever down to test. If the red light turns on you should be good to go for a while. The batteries last for at least a year or several years.
Ken Rockwell gives some good information on the Nikon FE, so check his web site.
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