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The FM accepts all Nikon F bayonet mount lenses, with certain limitations or exceptions. Full compatibility requires lenses that support the Automatic Maximum-Aperture Indexing (AI) specification. This includes most Nikon lenses manufactured after 1977. Pre-AI lenses can be used, but only with stop-down metering.
Nikon's most recent 35 mm film SLR lenses, the AF Nikkor G type (introduced in 2000) and the AF Nikkor DX type (2003) will mount but will not function properly. IX Nikkor lenses (1996), for Nikon's Advanced Photo System (APS) film SLRs, must not be mounted, as their rear elements will intrude far enough into the mirror box to cause damage.
Pages in category "Nikon F-mount cameras" ... Nikon FM; Nikon FM2; Nikon FM2N; Nikon FM2/T; Nikon FM3A; Nikon FM10; N. Nikon N60; Nikon N65; Nikon N2000; Nikon N2020 ...
WMIX (940 kHz) is a commercial radio station licensed to Mount Vernon, Illinois. It is owned by Withers Broadcasting with the broadcast license held by the Withers Broadcasting Company of Illinois, LLC. The studios and offices are on Withers Drive. WMIX 940 airs a soft oldies and adult standards radio format.
WMVI (106.7 FM) is a Class A radio station licensed to Mount Vernon, Indiana, serving the Posey County, Indiana market. The format became ESPN Radio on January 1, 2007. The station is owned by The Original Company, based in Vincennes, Indiana.
Nikon owners began to demand a durable, precision-made camera with the AE electronic features and prized construction of the discontinued Nikon FE2, which had begun to skyrocket in value on the secondhand market. Nikon responded to this phenomenon with a revival of their classic FM/FE series design.
The studios and offices are on Freeway Drive in Mount Vernon. By day, KBRC is powered at 5,000 watts non-directional. But to protect other stations on 1430 AM from interference at night, it reduces power to 1,000 watts and uses a directional antenna with a two-tower array. [2] Programming is also heard on 250-watt FM translator K275CV at 102.9 MHz.
Many of the newest Nikon and third-party F-mount lenses, and some older designs, will mount on the FM10, but will not function properly. Nikon’s most recent 35 mm film/full-frame FX digital SLR lenses, the AF Nikkor G type (introduced in 2000) lack an aperture control ring, without which there is no way to set aperture using the FM10.