I'm looking at buying a new SLR body. I have an old film Nikon entry-level SLR (about ten years old) with a kit lens. If I buy a Nikon body, how likely is it that my old lens will work on it? Would I be better off buying a new lens?
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This is a particularly thorny question with Nikon. On one hand, Nikon still uses the same basic mount as their very first SLRs did shortly after the second world war was over. On the other hand, over the years they've had to come up with quite a few variations on that mount. As a result, the exact degree of compatibility between a particular lens and camera varies all the way from "it'll work fine" to "can break the lens and/or camera." There are quite a number of compatibility charts around to help out though. |
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Is your lens autofocus? If so, your new camera will need the autofocus drive - many of Nikon's newer, entry level dslr's don't have one. Most of my older lenses are MF (Manual Focus). I have a 30+ yr old MF Nikkor 135mm that works great on my D700. It's been "AI'd" which means someone cut a notch in the part of the lens's mounting ring so that the newer Nikon bodies known what aperture the lens is set at. If it isn't AI then you might have some issues. I don't know if that means it won't mount or if you just lose metering. Maybe someone else can comment about some of the other newer terms like "AIS", etc. The link below explains mo'better |
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As long as your older lenses have the same mount compatability then every should work together just fine. I have some 20+ year old manual focus sigma lenses that work with my D200. |
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Assuming your lens will work fully on the body you choose (see the other answers), you've still got to decide whether you want to buy a new lens or not. There are a few issues besides compatibility:
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