Nikon N90
The N90 was introduced in 1992. Also, know as the F90 in some markets the F/N90 was Nikon’s offering for the high end consumer. The F3 and F4 were still the “Pro” versions. In 1994 a F90X/N90X version was released with improved auto focus.
The N90 may have been targeted at the consumer but it was not lacking when it came to professional level features. Electromagnetic shutter with speeds from 30 sec. to 1/8000 of a sec. Multiple metering mods include center-weighted, matrix and up to 21 spot mode. Exposure compensation has a +/_5 range in 1/3 stops. A variety of program modes include: Auto, Manual, Shutter priority, aperture priority and a various flash sync options.
The design of the N90 is not the level of an F3 or F4. Not bad just not the same level of fit and finish. The controls are well positioned and accessible. The built in hand grip holds 4 AA batteries to power everything. One design issue is the rubberized coating that they used on the back was not very durably. Over time the coating can get sticky and come off, seems to be a common issue. Mine was off in parts, fine in parts and sticky in parts. I decided to embrace the peel and rubbed mine off completely. The blank plastic is better than the gummy, sticky gunk.
My Take:
I was surprised by how good the auto focus system was. I intentionally went back and forth between close and far focus and it did a nice job of keeping up. The viewfinder was nice and bright with a good display to tell you mode, f-stop, shutter speed and frame count.
I shot primary in full auto because it felt like the right test for this camera. But you could also shoot in full manual and have all the control.
The N90 may not have all the looks and fame of the F4 but it is still a viable and capable camera. Plus they are cheap in the used market. If you want to try a near Pro-Grade early auto focus film SLR with your Nikon AF lens, the N/F90 is a good starting point.
Lens: Nikon AF Nikkor 85mm f1.8 D
Film: FujiColor 400