All FA-J lenses lack an aperture ring. There's 3-4 of that type, some really low-end zooms and the 18-35.

I'm expecting the Nikon solution. AF-I and AF-S lenses are fully compatible, they just don't AF on a body that lacks the extra contacts necessary (Which means all the early AF bodies except the F4 and possibly the N2020, which get AF because they support the F3AF lenses, which use the same protocol as AF-I and AF-S lenses)

-Adam


John Francis wrote:

I bought my Super Program in 1983, together with my first "A" lens.
But it wan't until I bought a PZ-1p (in 1995) that I first had a camera
that allowed me to set the aperture without using the lens aperture ring.
So, for the first ten years or so, I still needed those aperture rings
(as I did, some years later, with the MZ-S, and other MZ-series owners
did with their cameras).

The digital cameras are a special case, because the DA lenses aren't meant
for use on film bodies.  But, apart from DA lenses, have Pentax dropped
the aperture ring from any lenses yet?   I don't believe so, despite the
fact that it's been some time since they last offered a body that needed
the aperture ring (I think the MZ-S was the last to rely on it).
[Of course they've just dropped a whole lot of the lenses, so there aren't
all that many lenses still being sold with aperture rings.  And I believe
the only 'new' lenses with aperture rings are the D-FA macro lenses.]

I'd expect DA lenses to retain mechanical focus systems for at least 10
years.  But I'd also expect all new bodies to offer both electronic and
mechanical operation of focus (and/or aperture) from now on.  So in 10
years time the only bodies that won't be able to use hypothetical lenses
without mechanical focus would be the current *ist-D range. Just how many
of those will still be in operation 10 years from now?  And, rather more
to the point, how many people who are still using ten-year-old cameras
will be considering buying new lenses?

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