Nikon patents digital sensor back for old-school 35mm film cameras

Nikon patents digital sensor back for oldschool 35mm cameras

Can’t let go of that aging 35mm SLR accustomed to a strict film-only diet? Nikon seems to be toying with the idea of feeding its older models digits instead, judging by a Japanese patent application published last week. It was filed just last year and shows a digital back designed to be swapped out easily, complete with a screw adjustment to fine-tune the all-important focal distance. The patent was scoped by prolific Japanese blogger Egami, who pointed out that a different design would be required for each of Nikon’s film SLR models, which all have different backs — but an actual product coming to market seems quite a stretch anyway, at this point. Such devices are commonplace on medium format cameras though, and Leica even offered one for its R8 and R9 35mm SLR cameras as recently as 2007. Still, a pure digital version of our classic F2? Yes please.

Filed under: Cameras, Nikon

Comments

Via: Nikon Rumors

Source: Egami Blog

Related posts

Latest posts

Meta’s Oakley smartglasses could be the next big wearable trendsetter

Meta is apparently developing a new pair of smartglasses with popular eyewear brand Oakley, as well as expanding its Ray-Ban Meta range, according to a new report.

Nvidia’s RTX 50-series might give us a repeat of the GPU shortage

Nvidia’s RTX 5090 and RTX 5080 are set to release later this month, and there’s no doubt that they’ll end up being some of the of the year. Unfortunately, it also seems that they might be hard to come by, as many sources expect that the will have very limited availability to start with.  If […]

Nvidia says melting power connectors are a thing of the past

Nvidia is confident there will be no melting connectors thanks to the 12V-2x6 standard featured on its RTX 50-series GPUs.

The RTX 5090 is absolutely stunning — but Nvidia made one annoying change

Nvidia's RTX 5090 Founder's Edition is one of the best-looking GPUs I've ever seen, but it has one annoying problem.

Is your Fitbit getting too hot? Google wants to give you $50

The Fitbit Sense and Fitbit Versa 3 smartwatches are at risk of overheating. Google has issued a firmware update, but it reduces overall battery life.

Careful — this Google ad could swipe your bank data without you knowing

This malicious Google ad for the Homebrew website was almost impossible to spot because it displayed the correct URL before people clicked on it.

Face controls are coming to Chromebooks, and they look wild

Google adds helpful feature to Chromebooks that allows users to control their Chromebook with their faces. This is great news for those with motor impairments.

The iPhone now has an app to automatically block spam calls

One of the most popular tools for identifying unknown callers and blocking spam calls and SMS messages has received new functionality for iPhone.

Nothing just dropped a cryptic teaser, and it involves Pokémon

Nothing has released another characteristically cryptic teaser for an upcoming product: a single image of the Pokémon Arcanine.

The Samsung Galaxy S25 is less of an upgrade than I expected

The Galaxy S24 and were incremental improvements over previous generations, but those small improvements resulted in a bigger overall improvement than it first seemed. Fast-forward a year, and Samsung has followed the same mold again, but with fewer changes than I can remember in recent history. The Galaxy S25 and Galaxy S25 Plus look and […]