![]() For good sharpness with a much smaller and cheaper lens, get the 50mm Nikkor f/1.8 AF-S (especially if you don't need f/1.4).For good sharpness especially stopped down a little and a moderate price and size, get the 50mm Nikkor AF-S f/1.4.For nice bokeh and general rendering at the cost of absolute sharpness, get the 58mm Nikkor AF-S (or possibly the Zeiss Milvus).For extremely good sharpness at wide apertures with a fairly big and expensive lens, get the 50mm Sigma "Art".For absolute best sharpness at the cost of the lens being enormous, manual focus and very expensive, get a 55mm Zeiss Otus f/1.4.So ignoring compatibility, it depends what you want: Unless you find an old, manual, pre-AI lens (which you could only use if you had your F6's aperture ring adapted to let the aperture tab fold back or if you had the lens adapted to be "AI-converted") you should be able to use anything. I don't believe there's a recent 50mm lens that's incompatible with the F6 (I don't think any use electronic aperture, which is the main technology the F6 lacks compared to the latest DSLRs when it comes to driving a lens).
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