

It was released with 2 AF Nikkor lenses: an 80mm f/2.8 and a 200mm f/3.5 ED-IF (extra-low dispersion glass w/ internal focusing).

It featured a special AF Finder with only 92% coverage as opposed to the regular F3's 100%. Incidentally, there was an F 3 AF model released in 1983, really as a working prototype (using a more primitive version of the phase-detection AF of the F4). And it can use almost any AF-Nikkor lens ever made, excluding the newest "E" and AF-P types. subject tracking for fast-moving subjects is definitely not its strong point and neither is low light). More in-depth : One cannot expect modern-day auto focus performance out of a nearly 30 year-old camera, but the F4 can hold its own with its single, central AF sensor if its limitations are respected (i.e.
