Note that SLRs are usually sold for 30 to 40 percent below list price. By 1988, it listed for $525 in 1995, it plateaued at $745 and remained there until discontinued. The introductory US list price for the chrome body only (no lens) was $364. It was available in two colors: black with chrome trim and all black. (Actually the first models were with a flash X-sync 1/200th second.) It had dimensions of 90 mm (height), 142 mm (width), 60 mm (depth) and a weight of 540 g. The FM2 originally used an advanced Nikon-design, metal-bladed, bearing-mounted, vertical-travel purely mechanical focal plane shutter with a (then unheard-of) speed range of 1 to 1/4000th second plus Bulb, plus a fast flash X-sync of 1/250th second. The original camera was released with some incremental improvements (such as a higher flash-sync speed) in 1984, and this later version is commonly referred to as the FM2n (for 'new', due to the N preceding the serial number on the rear of the top plate), although both versions are labelled as the FM2 on the front of the camera body. (today Nikon Corporation) in Japan from 1982 to 2001. The Nikon FM2 is an advanced semi-professional, interchangeable lens, 35 mm film, single-lens reflex (SLR) camera.
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