The F50 (or N50 as it is known in North America) is a 35mm film SLR camera which was introduced by Nikon in 1994.[1] It was aimed at the lower end of the amateur autofocus SLR market.
The F50 features autofocus, TTL light metering and various "programs" (ranging from manual operation to a highly automated point and shoot mode). It could not however meter with non-CPU lenses.
It was replaced by the similarly-priced F60 (also known as the N60) in 1998.
^F50 Archived 2008-09-09 at the Wayback Machine, Nikon corporate site. Article retrieved 2007-07-12.
The F50 (or N50 as it is known in North America) is a 35mm film SLR camera which was introduced by Nikon in 1994. It was aimed at the lower end of the...
frigate of the Indian Navy Eating disorder ESP F-50, a guitar NikonF50, a camera Search for "f50" , "f-50", "f5-0", or "f-5-0" on Wikipedia. F-50/FA-50 variants...
N5005) NikonF50 (1994, known in the U.S. as the N50) Nikon F60 (1999, known in the U.S. as the N60) Nikon F65 (2000, known in the U.S. as the N65) Nikon F55...
U.S.) is a 35mm film SLR camera which was sold by Nikon between 1998 and 2001. It replaced the F50 and was aimed at the lower end of the amateur autofocus...