SOURCE: Nikon AF 35-135 lens
Did the only the lens drop or was the lens attached to the camera body? If the lens was attached to the camera, you need to verify that the problem is in fact the lens and not the camera body. The easiest way to do that is to try a different lens on your camera body or your lens on a different body. If you do not have access to either, I would find a local camera store that sells Nikon equipment. I am sure they will let you put your lens on one of there bodies. In any case, ff the damage is as extensive as it sounds from your brief description, you need to take it to a camera repair man. This is not a do-it-yourself job.
SOURCE: Can an automatic focus lens be used with the Nikon
hi, you can use this lance with tourr camera but you could not use the functions of auto lance
SOURCE: Nikon FA will not advance. Meter will not give reading.
Nikon Fa advance lever loose.
Not used camera for a few years and set to M250 mode due to not having batteries, Advanced lever once to test, advanced one, then pulled lever back for another test.
Lever then feels lifeless and has no resistance to being moved. it will not take a picture even with batteries. any Idea what the problem is?
SOURCE: Nikon FA depth of field preview lever sticky
The small lever on the inside of the mirror box is what controls the aperture. If the lever on the outside is sticking, it would only hold the lever on the inside down so you would be stopped down all the time. You can try a small amount of lighter fluid at the base of the outside lever and work it back and forth to see if it would free up.
SOURCE: i would like a 35-105 or 35-135 lens for my nikon
The F90X can use just about any Nikon-mount lens made in the past half-century, with the exception of lenses specifically designed for digital cameras with smaller sensors.
Nikon currently makes two 24-120mm lenses:
http://www.nikonusa.com/Nikon-Products/Camera-Lenses/index.page
Among older lenses there are autofocus 24-120mm, 28-105mm, 35-105mm lenses:
http://www.bythom.com/nikkordb.htm
There are a number of third-party lenses as well, from makers such as Sigma, Tamron, and Tokina.
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