All the Nikons I bought during the last four decades came in yellow-gold boxes, this one arrived in a black box with a yellow bottom. A free Sony 64GB 440/400MB/s XQD card was in the box.
First impression: body is a little smaller than expected, but with a very good grip and the (not too small) AF-ON button at the right location. The 35/1.8S is longer than expected, a little bit weird and beercanish. It has a metal focus ring. Together not too light, and not too heavy.
This time no need to wait for the battery to charge; I already own a pile of EL-EN15 batteries for the other Nikons.
I must have searched in vain for a rather long time to find the auto-magnify function (for Z lenses with focus ring movement detection), but it doesn’t seem to be there. So I assigned the 1:1 zoom function to the red video record button. The good news is that manual focus override is always possible without touching a button at all (like with an AF-S lens on a DSLR). Of course this makes only sense if AF activation is removed from the release button. Fuji and Sony don’t have this…
The FTZ adapter works well with AF-S G and E lenses in AF mode; it is very very very easy now to pinpoint focus with the 58/1.4 NeoNoct at F/1.4.
For all lenses with a CPU it seems that the Z7 always closes the aperture down up to F/5.6; beyond that it keeps the aperture at F/5.6. As far I can see, and as expected, lenses without CPU (Ai, Ais Nikkors) are always used stopped down.
For non-CPU lenses it seems essential to enter the lens data correctly in order to have the IBIS work properly. Having lenses chipped makes even more sense now.
No strap attached yet, but handholding with the FTZ adapter isn’t that uncomfortable at all, even with bigger and heavier Nikkors.
A lot to try yet, best thing now is to go out shooting.