There's a software to transfer it with into your scanned pictures. It's quick and will eat one film roll in four seconds in high speed mode.īoth cameras collect "exif data" in their built in memory. Hard to see which of the unlit focusing points is used in the view finder. The F5 on the other hand (early serial numbers starting with 301, 302xxxx and so on) may suffer from "low battery indicator" which shuts down the camera when camera think the batteries are empty while they're not. Build quality is poor and fuctions are simpler compared to F5 in my opinion. The rubber is "melting" and makes the camera sticky. Unless you are using the battery grip mB-15 the camera's battery door lock may brake. No spare parts are available so you might fix it with a rubber band or gaffa tape. In worst case destroy your film by exposing it to light. The film back door latches (plastic) will brake any day and leave the door open. At least not on a so called "semi pro" camera. F5 is "built to last" while F100 has plastic parts where you don't expect.
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