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Review Summary
2015-06-09T21:00:00
I love this camera! First camera to have matrix metering, plus center weighted and PSAM exposure modes. I upgraded the easily interchangeable focusing screen to the K3 from the much later FM3a. Large, bright viewfinder and built in viewfinder blind. Solid, all metal construction. To me, a much better camera than either the FE/2 or FM/2/3a, or even the F3. What the F3 adds I don't use, and F3's motor drive is ridiculously large and heavy. Just a nearly perfect manual focus camera for me. unfortunately, the one I received was defective, with a battery drain issue, that was either impossible to repair (parts are scarce) or not financially reasonable to repair. I will probably get another one some day soon.
JOHN C.
Nippon Kogaku K. K.
35 mm SLR
Nikon F mount
Manual
High Speed Program, Program, Shutter priority, Aperture priority, Manual
1/250 s
1-1/4000s, 1/250s, mechanical backup, Bulb
ISO 12 to 3200
2 LR44 or SR44 batteries
92 x 142.5 x 64.5 mm
625 g
Japen
Black
The Nikon FA "Black" is an advanced amateur-level, interchangeable lens, 35 mm film, single-lens reflex (SLR) camera. It is manufactured by the Japanese optics company Nippon Kogaku K. K. (Nikon Corporation since 1988) in Japan from 1983 to1987 (available new from dealer stock until circa 1989). The FA uses a titanium-bladed, vertical-travel Nikon-designed, Copal-made focal plane shutter with a speed range of 1 to 1/4000th second plus Bulb and flash X-sync of 1/250thsecond.
The FA is the most sophisticated member of the remarkably long-lived, classic Nikon compact F-series SLRs and was built upon a compact but rugged copper aluminum alloy chassis developed from the ones used by the earlier Nikon FM (introduced in 1977), FE (1978), FM2 (1982) and FE2 (1983) cameras. The FM/FE series have only minor external controls and cosmetic differences, but the FA had a distinctly chunkier body and larger, boxier pentaprism cover to house its extra electronics. The limited production Nikon FM3A of 2001 continued to use this body design until 2006.
The Nikon FA is a historically significant camera. It was the first camera to offer a multi-segmented (or matrix or evaluative) exposure light meter, called Automatic Multi-Pattern (AMP). It has a built-in microprocessor computer programmed to automatically analyze different segments of the light meter field of view and select a corrected exposure. Virtually all cameras today, whether film, video or digital, have some sort of matrix metering.
The Nikon FA is Nippon Kogaku's high technology standard bearer, sandwiched between the sturdy, but basic Nikon FE2 and the professional level Nikon F3 SLR (introduced in 1980). With its advanced AMP meter, Nippon Kogaku fully expected that many professional photographers, as well as amateurs, would buy it.