Nikon's 1988 35mm f/3.5 autofocus compact — sold as One Touch 100 in the US, DX coding, built-in flash
The Nikon RF2 was a 35mm autofocus compact introduced in 1988 within Nikon's One Touch point-and-shoot family. In North America it was sold as the One Touch 100, and a Quartz Date variant was badged RD2. It sat among Nikon's simple fixed-lens compacts of the late 1980s, offering fully automatic snapshot operation.
It carries a fixed 35mm f/3.5 lens with active autofocus down to 0.65m and a 30-second focus memory. Film speed is set by DX coding for ISO 100-400 films, exposure is fully automatic, and the integrated flash offers fill-in operation with roughly 3.5-second recycling and around 10m of range. A double self-timer can fire two frames in a row, power comes from two AA batteries, and the body weighs about 250g.
It suits film shooters who want a no-decisions point-and-shoot with a classic 35mm focal length for street, travel and documentary snapshots. The moderate f/3.5 aperture and narrow DX range mean it is happiest outdoors in daylight or indoors with flash, and the AA power supply is easier to feed than button-cell compacts.
Like most motorised AF compacts it will not fire at all without working batteries, so test power-up, film advance and rewind before buying. Confirm the flash charges and fires, check battery contacts for alkaline corrosion, inspect the light seals around the film door, and verify the frame counter and self-timer operate. Many eBay listings are untested, so price accordingly.