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Nikon F-601M

35 mm SLR camera From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nikon F-601M
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The Nikon F-601m (sold in USA as the N6000) is a manual focus, autoexposure, auto film loading and advancing 35 mm SLR camera manufactured by the Nikon Corporation and released in 1990.

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The F-601m is a simplified version of the F-601, with no autofocus capability, no spot metering and no built-in flash.[1]

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Features

  • Flexible programmed (P), aperture priority (A) and shutter priority (S) auto-exposure and manual exposure control.
  • Matrix and Center-Weighted Metering.
  • Auto-exposure bracketing.
  • Self-timer.
  • High or low speed continuous film advance.
  • DX film code recognition to automatically set ISO speed.
  • Exposure and flash compensation.
  • TTL flash exposure.[2][3]

Construction

  • Polycarbonate (plastic) exterior.
  • Metal lens mount.

Lens Compatibility

  • CPU[broken anchor] lenses required for full compatibility.[3]
  • Manual focus lenses lose P & S modes, matrix metering, and aperture display in the finder[3]
  • Pre-AI and IX lenses not supported[3]
  • G-type lenses will work in P & S modes, and only smallest aperture in A & M modes.
  • DX lenses will be vignetted, otherwise same as G-type
  • VR functionality not supported

References

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