Stan Disbrow
Veteran Member
Hi,
Hmmm. I clearly recall reading ads and interviews in photographic magazines from Nikon touting they would always support compatibility between their lenses. This at the time AF was coming out with the F4. This, because Canon had told their users of FD lenses they were going to be SOL now that the EF system was out.
Note this is the same Nikon which supplied aperture rings for F mount Type-A and Type-K lenses so they could be used on AI bodies. So they had five lens systems out when they began AF-I and AF-S and those would be useful going both forward and backwards.
And Nikon even designed the Pronea to take F mount lenses as well as their native IX series. So, here is a another example of them always keeping compatibility.
A good many long term Nikon customers expected the first FTZ to support AF as well as AF-D. And we were surprised that it did not.
Now if there was never an FTZ at all for the Z, it wouldn't matter. I'd see the Z as something completely different.
So for someone who had F2, FE, FA, F4, F5, E2, E3, D1, D1H, D1X, D2H, D2X and Df cameras, and has Type-A, Type-K, AI, AI-S, AI-P, AF, AF-D, and AF-S lenses, I am not considering a move to any Z body until I can at the very least use AF with my two DC lenses.
Stan
Hmmm. I clearly recall reading ads and interviews in photographic magazines from Nikon touting they would always support compatibility between their lenses. This at the time AF was coming out with the F4. This, because Canon had told their users of FD lenses they were going to be SOL now that the EF system was out.
Note this is the same Nikon which supplied aperture rings for F mount Type-A and Type-K lenses so they could be used on AI bodies. So they had five lens systems out when they began AF-I and AF-S and those would be useful going both forward and backwards.
And Nikon even designed the Pronea to take F mount lenses as well as their native IX series. So, here is a another example of them always keeping compatibility.
A good many long term Nikon customers expected the first FTZ to support AF as well as AF-D. And we were surprised that it did not.
Now if there was never an FTZ at all for the Z, it wouldn't matter. I'd see the Z as something completely different.
So for someone who had F2, FE, FA, F4, F5, E2, E3, D1, D1H, D1X, D2H, D2X and Df cameras, and has Type-A, Type-K, AI, AI-S, AI-P, AF, AF-D, and AF-S lenses, I am not considering a move to any Z body until I can at the very least use AF with my two DC lenses.
Stan