advertisement
▼
Scroll to page 2
of
424
![FUJIFILM X-S20 Camera Manual | Manualzz FUJIFILM X-S20 Camera Manual | Manualzz](http://s1.manualzz.com/store/data/073143176_1-431a257adc7623b592603f64b2066224-360x466.png)
FF220002 Owner’s Manual BL00005213-200 EN Introduction Thank you for your purchase of this product. Be sure that you have read this manual and understood its contents before using the camera. Keep the manual where it will be read by all who use the product. For the Latest Information The latest versions of the manuals are available from: https://fujifilm-dsc.com/en/manual/ The website can be accessed not only from your computer but also from smartphones and tablets. It also contains information on the software license. For information on firmware updates, visit: https://fujifilm-x.com/support/download/firmware/cameras/ ii P Chapter Index Menu List iv 1 Before You Begin 1 2 First Steps 31 3 Basic Photography and Playback 47 4 Movie Recording and Playback 55 5 Taking Photographs 67 6 The Shooting Menus 127 7 Playback and the Playback Menu 219 8 Network/USB Features and Settings 245 9 The Setup Menus 269 10 Shortcuts 307 11 Peripherals and Optional Accessories 329 12 Technical Notes 349 iii Menu List Camera menu options are listed below. Menu List Shooting Menus Adjust settings when shooting photos or movies. N See page 127 for details. Photo Menus N Items marked with both x and F icons are available in both the still photography and movie shooting menus. Changes to these items in either menu also apply to the item in the remaining menu. H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING IMAGE SIZE IMAGE QUALITY RAW RECORDING SELECT JPEG/HEIF 1⁄4 FILM SIMULATION MONOCHROMATIC COLOR GRAIN EFFECT COLOR CHROME EFFECT COLOR CHROME FX BLUE WHITE BALANCE DYNAMIC RANGE D RANGE PRIORITY 2⁄4 TONE CURVE COLOR SHARPNESS HIGH ISO NR iv P H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING CLARITY 128 LONG EXPOSURE NR 129 LENS MODULATION OPTIMIZER 130 COLOR SPACE 131 3⁄4 PIXEL MAPPING 132 134 x EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING 134 AUTO UPDATE CUSTOM SETTING 135 xF CUSTOM MODE SETTING 135 4⁄4 xF MOUNT ADAPTOR SETTING 136 140 140 141 141 141 142 P 142 142 143 143 143 144 144 144 145 Menu List P A SHOOTING SETTING 148 148 148 149 153 153 153 154 154 155 156 158 160 161 161 162 162 162 163 164 165 A SHOOTING SETTING AUTO MODE SETTING FILTER SETTING SPORTS FINDER MODE PRE-SHOT sJ 1⁄3 SELF-TIMER SAVE SELF-TIMER SETTING SELF-TIMER LAMP AE BKT SETTING 167 167 168 169 169 170 170 170 P FILM SIMULATION BKT FOCUS BKT SETTING PHOTOMETRY SHUTTER TYPE 2⁄3 INTERVAL TIMER SHOOTING INTERVAL TIMER SHOOTING EXPOSURE SMOOTHING INTERVAL PRIORITY MODE FLICKER REDUCTION FLICKERLESS S.S. SETTING IS MODE 3⁄3 ISO xF COOLING FAN SETTING xF WIRELESS COMMUNICATION 175 175 176 176 177 177 177 F FLASH SETTING FLASH FUNCTION SETTING RED EYE REMOVAL TTL-LOCK MODE LED LIGHT SETTING COMMANDER SETTING CH SETTING 178 178 179 179 180 180 P B MOVIE SETTING MOVIE MODE HIGH SPEED REC MEDIA REC SETTING F IS MODE F IS MODE BOOST AUDIO SETTING MIC/REMOTE RELEASE F REC FRAME INDICATOR 171 171 171 172 173 174 P P 181 181 181 182 182 182 185 185 v Menu List G AF/MF SETTING FOCUS AREA FOCUS MODE AF MODE AF-C CUSTOM SETTINGS 1⁄3 STORE AF MODE BY ORIENTATION AF POINT DISPLAYyz xF WRAP FOCUS POINT NUMBER OF FOCUS POINTS PRE-AF xF AF ILLUMINATOR g FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING SUBJECT DETECTION SETTING 2⁄3 AF+MF MF ASSIST FOCUS CHECK INTERLOCK SPOT AE & FOCUS AREA xF INSTANT AF SETTING xF DEPTH-OF-FIELD SCALE 3⁄3 RELEASE/FOCUS PRIORITY xF AF RANGE LIMITER TOUCH SCREEN MODE Movie Menus N Items marked with both x and F icons are available in both the still photography and movie shooting menus. Changes to these items in either menu also apply to the item in the remaining menu. Menu List P H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING P B MOVIE SETTING MOVIE SETTING LIST 186 202 F FILM SIMULATION SHOOTING MODE 186 202 F MONOCHROMATIC COLOR MOVIE MODE 187 203 F WHITE BALANCE BACKGROUND DEFOCUS MODE 188 203 F DYNAMIC RANGE 1⁄4 HIGH SPEED REC 189 1⁄2 F TONE CURVE 203 190 F SELF-TIMER 203 F COLOR MEDIA REC SETTING 190 204 F SHARPNESS HDMI OUTPUT SETTING 193 204 F HIGH ISO NR FIX MOVIE CROP MAGNIFICATION 194 INTERFRAME NR 204 F-Log/HLG RECORDING 195 2⁄2 F PERIPHERAL LIGHT CORRECTION 205 DATA LEVEL SETTING 196 xF MOUNT ADAPTOR SETTING 205 196 F PHOTOMETRY 2⁄4 196 F FLICKERLESS S.S. SETTING 197 F IS MODE 197 F IS MODE BOOST 197 F ISO ZEBRA SETTING 198 ZEBRA LEVEL 198 MOVIE OPTIMIZED CONTROL oL 199 199 F REC FRAME INDICATOR 3⁄4 TALLY LIGHT 200 201 xF COOLING FAN SETTING F EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING 201 F AUTO UPDATE CUSTOM SETTING 201 201 xF CUSTOM MODE SETTING 4⁄4 xF WIRELESS COMMUNICATION 201 vi Menu List P P AUDIO SETTING P INTERNAL MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT 214 206 EXTERNAL MIC LEVEL ADJUST206 214 MENT 206 MIC JACK SETTING 214 207 MIC LEVEL LIMITER 215 1⁄2 207 WIND FILTER 215 208 LOW CUT FILTER 215 208 HEADPHONES VOLUME 215 208 MIC/REMOTE RELEASE 215 2⁄2 XLR MIC ADAPTER SETTING 216 209 P Q TIME CODE SETTING 209 TIME CODE DISPLAY 217 209 START TIME SETTING 217 210 COUNT UP SETTING 217 210 DROP FRAME 218 210 HDMI TIME CODE OUTPUT 218 210 211 213 vii Menu List G AF/MF SETTING F FOCUS AREA F FOCUS MODE F AF MODE F AF-C CUSTOM SETTING 1⁄3 xF WRAP FOCUS POINT xF AF ILLUMINATOR PRODUCT PRIORITY MODE Fg FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING F SUBJECT DETECTION SETTING F AF+MF F MF ASSIST 2⁄3 F FOCUS CHECK xF INSTANT AF SETTING xF DEPTH-OF-FIELD SCALE xF AF RANGE LIMITER F TOUCH SCREEN MODE 3⁄3 FOCUS CHECK LOCK The Playback Menu Adjust playback settings. N See page 225 for details. Menu List C PLAY BACK MENU RAW CONVERSION HEIF TO JPEG/TIFF CONVERSION ERASE CROP 1⁄2 RESIZE PROTECT IMAGE ROTATE VOICE MEMO SETTING viii P C PLAY BACK MENU P 225 RATING 236 228 TRANSFER IMAGE TO SMARTPHONE 237 229 xF WIRELESS COMMUNICATION 239 231 SLIDE SHOW 239 2⁄2 232 PHOTOBOOK ASSIST 240 233 PRINT ORDER (DPOF) 242 234 instax PRINTER PRINT 243 235 DISP ASPECT 244 Menu List Setup Menus Adjust basic camera settings. N See page 269 for details. D SOUND SETTING AF BEEP VOL. SELF-TIMER BEEP VOL. OPERATION VOL. F REC START/STOP VOLUME 1⁄2 t ELECTRONIC SHUTTER VOLUME t ELECTRONIC SHUTTER SOUND s ELECTRONIC SHUTTER VOLUME s ELECTRONIC SHUTTER SOUND PLAYBACK VOLUME 2⁄2 4ch AUDIO PLAYBACK P D SCREEN SETTING P VIEW MODE SETTING 278 270 EVF BRIGHTNESS 278 271 EVF COLOR 278 271 EVF COLOR ADJUSTMENT 279 272 1⁄4 LCD BRIGHTNESS 279 272 LCD COLOR 279 273 LCD COLOR ADJUSTMENT 279 273 IMAGE DISP. 280 273 AUTOROTATE DISPLAYS 280 273 PREVIEW EXP./WB IN MANUAL MODE 281 274 NATURAL LIVE VIEW 281 274 282 274 2⁄4 F-Log VIEW ASSIST ELECTRONIC LEVEL SETTING 282 P FRAMING GUIDELINE 282 275 AUTOROTATE PB 283 275 FOCUS SCALE UNITS 283 275 APERTURE UNIT FOR CINEMA LENS 283 276 DISP. CUSTOM SETTING 283 276 LARGE INDICATORS MODE(EVF) 284 276 LARGE INDICATORS MODE(LCD) 285 277 3⁄4 LARGE INDICATORS DISP. SETTING 286 277 INFORMATION CONTRAST ADJ. 287 277 LOCATION INFO 287 277 288 x Q MENU BACKGROUND 4⁄4 F Q MENU BACKGROUND 288 ix Menu List D USER SETTING FORMAT b AREA SETTING DATE/TIME TIME DIFFERENCE 1⁄2 Qa x MY MENU SETTING F MY MENU SETTING SENSOR CLEANING BATTERY AGE SOUND & FLASH 2⁄2 RESET REGULATORY Menu List Menu List D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING FOCUS LEVER SETTING x EDIT/SAVE QUICK MENU F EDIT/SAVE QUICK MENU FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING 1⁄3 POWER ZOOM LENS FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING COMMAND DIAL SETTING o S.S OPERATION COMMAND DIAL DIRECTION SHUTTER AF SHUTTER AE SHOOT WITHOUT LENS SHOOT WITHOUT CARD 2⁄3 LENS ZOOM/FOCUS SETTING AE/AF-LOCK MODE AWB-LOCK MODE a ISO BUTTON SETTING TOUCH SCREEN SETTING 3⁄3 LOCK x P D POWER MANAGEMENT P AUTO POWER OFF PERFORMANCE EVF/LCD BOOST SETTING AUTO POWER OFF TEMP. 301 301 302 302 289 290 290 290 290 D SAVE DATA SETTING FRAME NO. 291 EDIT FILE NAME 291 SELECT FOLDER 291 COPYRIGHT INFO 292 GEOTAGGING 292 293 293 294 296 296 297 298 300 P 303 304 304 305 305 Menu List The Network/USB Settings Menu Adjust settings for network and USB connections. N See page 262 for details. P Menu List I NETWORK/USB SETTING Bluetooth/SMARTPHONE SETTING AIRPLANE MODE NETWORK SETTING instax PRINTER CONNECTION SETTING CONNECTION MODE USB POWER SUPPLY/ COMM SETTING INFORMATION RESET WIRELESS SETTING 262 265 265 265 266 268 268 268 xi P Table of Contents Introduction ..........................................................................................................ii For the Latest Information .......................................................................................... ii Menu List...............................................................................................................iv Shooting Menus ..............................................................................................................iv The Playback Menu......................................................................................................viii Setup Menus ...................................................................................................................... ix The Network/USB Settings Menu ......................................................................... xi Supplied Accessories .................................................................................... xxv About This Manual........................................................................................xxvi Symbols and Conventions ...................................................................................xxvi Terminology ..................................................................................................................xxvi 1 Before You Begin 1 Parts of the Camera ............................................................................................2 The Mode Dial ....................................................................................................................4 The Focus Stick (Focus Lever) ...................................................................................5 I (Drive) Button ..............................................................................................................5 The Command Dials.......................................................................................................6 The Fn (Function) Dial ...................................................................................................7 The Serial Number Plate ..............................................................................................7 The Indicator Lamp.........................................................................................................8 The LCD Monitor ..............................................................................................................9 Focusing the Viewfinder ..............................................................................................9 Camera Displays ............................................................................................... 10 The Electronic Viewfinder ........................................................................................ 10 The LCD Monitor ........................................................................................................... 12 Choosing a Display Mode........................................................................................ 14 Adjusting Display Brightness ................................................................................. 16 Display Rotation ............................................................................................................. 16 The DISP/BACK Button............................................................................................... 17 Customizing the Standard Display..................................................................... 19 Virtual Horizon ................................................................................................................ 21 Using the Menus .............................................................................................. 22 The Menus......................................................................................................................... 22 Selecting a Menu Tab ................................................................................................. 24 xii Table of Contents Touch Screen Mode......................................................................................... 25 Shooting Touch Controls ......................................................................................... 25 Playback Touch Controls........................................................................................... 30 2 First Steps 31 3 Basic Photography and Playback 47 4 Movie Recording and Playback 55 Attaching the Strap ......................................................................................... 32 Attaching a Lens ............................................................................................... 33 Inserting the Battery and a Memory Card .............................................. 34 Compatible Memory Cards .................................................................................... 36 Charging the Battery ...................................................................................... 37 Turning the Camera On and Off ................................................................. 41 Checking the Battery Level........................................................................... 42 Basic Setup ......................................................................................................... 43 Choosing a Different Language........................................................................... 45 Changing the Time and Date ................................................................................ 45 Taking Photographs ........................................................................................ 48 Viewing Pictures ............................................................................................... 50 HDMI Output ................................................................................................................... 51 Deleting Pictures .............................................................................................. 53 Recording Movies ............................................................................................ 56 Recording Movies ......................................................................................................... 56 Adjusting Movie Settings ......................................................................................... 62 Viewing Movies................................................................................................. 63 Viewing Movies During Playback........................................................................ 63 Viewing Movies During Vlog Recording ......................................................... 64 xiii 5 Taking Photographs 67 Choosing a Shooting Mode ......................................................................... 68 Y (AUTO).......................................................................................................................... 68 Program AE (P) ................................................................................................................ 71 Shutter-Priority AE (S) ................................................................................................. 73 Aperture-Priority AE (A) ............................................................................................. 75 Manual Exposure (M) .................................................................................................. 77 FILTER .................................................................................................................................... 81 Custom Modes ............................................................................................................... 82 The Command and Function Dials .................................................................... 90 Autofocus ............................................................................................................ 91 Focus Mode ...................................................................................................................... 92 Autofocus Options (AF Mode) .............................................................................. 94 Focus-Point Selection................................................................................................. 96 Manual Focus...................................................................................................100 Checking Focus ........................................................................................................... 101 Sensitivity..........................................................................................................104 AUTO .................................................................................................................................. 105 Metering ............................................................................................................106 Exposure Compensation .............................................................................107 Focus/Exposure Lock ....................................................................................108 Other Controls ............................................................................................................. 109 Bracketing .........................................................................................................110 W ISO BKT ..................................................................................................................... 111 V WHITE BALANCE BKT ....................................................................................... 111 s Bracketing ............................................................................................................... 112 Continuous Shooting (Burst Mode).........................................................115 HDR .....................................................................................................................116 Panoramas ........................................................................................................118 Multiple Exposures ........................................................................................121 Flash Photography.........................................................................................123 Flash Settings................................................................................................................ 125 xiv Table of Contents 6 The Shooting Menus 127 IMAGE QUALITY SETTING (Still Photography) .....................................128 IMAGE SIZE ..................................................................................................................... 128 IMAGE QUALITY .......................................................................................................... 129 RAW RECORDING ....................................................................................................... 130 SELECT JPEG/HEIF...................................................................................................... 131 FILM SIMULATION ...................................................................................................... 132 MONOCHROMATIC COLOR.................................................................................. 134 GRAIN EFFECT .............................................................................................................. 134 COLOR CHROME EFFECT....................................................................................... 135 COLOR CHROME FX BLUE ..................................................................................... 135 WHITE BALANCE ......................................................................................................... 136 DYNAMIC RANGE ....................................................................................................... 140 D RANGE PRIORITY .................................................................................................... 140 TONE CURVE.................................................................................................................. 141 COLOR ............................................................................................................................... 141 SHARPNESS .................................................................................................................... 141 HIGH ISO NR .................................................................................................................. 142 CLARITY ............................................................................................................................ 142 LONG EXPOSURE NR ................................................................................................ 142 LENS MODULATION OPTIMIZER ....................................................................... 143 COLOR SPACE ............................................................................................................... 143 PIXEL MAPPING ........................................................................................................... 143 x EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING ..................................................................... 144 AUTO UPDATE CUSTOM SETTING.................................................................... 144 xF CUSTOM MODE SETTING ........................................................................ 144 xF MOUNT ADAPTOR SETTING .................................................................. 145 AF/MF SETTING (Still Photography) ........................................................148 FOCUS AREA ................................................................................................................. 148 FOCUS MODE ............................................................................................................... 148 AF MODE ......................................................................................................................... 148 AF-C CUSTOM SETTINGS ....................................................................................... 149 STORE AF MODE BY ORIENTATION .................................................................. 153 AF POINT DISPLAY yz ...................................................................................... 153 xF WRAP FOCUS POINT .................................................................................. 153 xv NUMBER OF FOCUS POINTS................................................................................ 154 PRE-AF ............................................................................................................................... 154 xF AF ILLUMINATOR .......................................................................................... 155 g FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING ................................................................. 156 SUBJECT DETECTION SETTING .......................................................................... 158 AF+MF .............................................................................................................................. 160 MF ASSIST ....................................................................................................................... 161 FOCUS CHECK .............................................................................................................. 161 INTERLOCK SPOT AE & FOCUS AREA.............................................................. 162 xF INSTANT AF SETTING ................................................................................. 162 xF DEPTH-OF-FIELD SCALE........................................................................... 162 RELEASE/FOCUS PRIORITY ................................................................................... 163 xF AF RANGE LIMITER....................................................................................... 164 TOUCH SCREEN MODE ........................................................................................... 165 SHOOTING SETTING (Still Photography)................................................167 AUTO MODE SETTING ............................................................................................. 167 FILTER SETTING ............................................................................................................ 167 SPORTS FINDER MODE ........................................................................................... 168 PRE-SHOT sJ .......................................................................................................... 169 SELF-TIMER ..................................................................................................................... 169 SAVE SELF-TIMER SETTING.................................................................................... 170 SELF-TIMER LAMP....................................................................................................... 170 AE BKT SETTING .......................................................................................................... 170 FILM SIMULATION BKT ............................................................................................ 171 FOCUS BKT SETTING ................................................................................................ 171 PHOTOMETRY ............................................................................................................... 171 SHUTTER TYPE.............................................................................................................. 172 INTERVAL TIMER SHOOTING ................................................................................ 173 INTERVAL TIMER SHOOTING EXPOSURE SMOOTHING........................ 174 INTERVAL PRIORITY MODE ................................................................................... 175 FLICKER REDUCTION ................................................................................................ 175 FLICKERLESS S.S. SETTING ..................................................................................... 176 IS MODE ........................................................................................................................... 176 ISO ....................................................................................................................................... 177 xF COOLING FAN SETTING ............................................................................ 177 xF WIRELESS COMMUNICATION................................................................ 177 xvi Table of Contents FLASH SETTING (Still Photography) ........................................................178 FLASH FUNCTION SETTING ................................................................................. 178 RED EYE REMOVAL..................................................................................................... 178 TTL-LOCK MODE ......................................................................................................... 179 LED LIGHT SETTING .................................................................................................. 179 COMMANDER SETTING .......................................................................................... 180 CH SETTING ................................................................................................................... 180 MOVIE SETTING (Still Photography) ........................................................181 MOVIE MODE ................................................................................................................ 181 HIGH SPEED REC ......................................................................................................... 181 MEDIA REC SETTING................................................................................................. 181 F IS MODE .................................................................................................................... 182 F IS MODE BOOST................................................................................................... 182 AUDIO SETTING........................................................................................................... 182 MIC/REMOTE RELEASE ............................................................................................ 185 F REC FRAME INDICATOR ................................................................................... 185 MOVIE SETTING (Movie Recording) .........................................................186 MOVIE SETTING LIST................................................................................................. 186 SHOOTING MODE ...................................................................................................... 186 MOVIE MODE ................................................................................................................ 187 BACKGROUND DEFOCUS MODE...................................................................... 188 HIGH SPEED REC ......................................................................................................... 189 F SELF-TIMER .............................................................................................................. 190 MEDIA REC SETTING................................................................................................. 190 HDMI OUTPUT SETTING......................................................................................... 193 FIX MOVIE CROP MAGNIFICATION .................................................................. 194 F-Log/HLG RECORDING ......................................................................................... 195 DATA LEVEL SETTING ............................................................................................... 196 F PHOTOMETRY ....................................................................................................... 196 F FLICKERLESS S.S. SETTING.............................................................................. 196 F IS MODE .................................................................................................................... 197 F IS MODE BOOST................................................................................................... 197 F ISO ................................................................................................................................ 197 ZEBRA SETTING ........................................................................................................... 198 ZEBRA LEVEL ................................................................................................................. 198 MOVIE OPTIMIZED CONTROL oL ................................................................ 199 xvii F REC FRAME INDICATOR ................................................................................... 199 TALLY LIGHT ................................................................................................................... 200 xF COOLING FAN SETTING ............................................................................ 201 F EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING...................................................................... 201 F AUTO UPDATE CUSTOM SETTING ............................................................ 201 xF CUSTOM MODE SETTING ........................................................................ 201 xF WIRELESS COMMUNICATION................................................................ 201 IMAGE QUALITY SETTING (Movie Recording) ......................................202 F FILM SIMULATION............................................................................................... 202 F MONOCHROMATIC COLOR .......................................................................... 202 F WHITE BALANCE .................................................................................................. 203 F DYNAMIC RANGE ................................................................................................ 203 F TONE CURVE .......................................................................................................... 203 F COLOR........................................................................................................................ 203 F SHARPNESS............................................................................................................. 204 F HIGH ISO NR ........................................................................................................... 204 INTERFRAME NR .......................................................................................................... 204 F PERIPHERAL LIGHT CORRECTION ............................................................. 205 xF MOUNT ADAPTOR SETTING .................................................................. 205 AF/MF SETTING (Movie Recording) .........................................................206 F FOCUS AREA .......................................................................................................... 206 F FOCUS MODE ........................................................................................................ 206 F AF MODE .................................................................................................................. 206 F AF-C CUSTOM SETTING .................................................................................. 207 xF WRAP FOCUS POINT .................................................................................. 207 xF AF ILLUMINATOR .......................................................................................... 208 PRODUCT PRIORITY MODE .................................................................................. 208 Fg FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING .......................................................... 208 F SUBJECT DETECTION SETTING ................................................................... 209 F AF+MF ....................................................................................................................... 209 F MF ASSIST ................................................................................................................ 209 F FOCUS CHECK ....................................................................................................... 210 xF INSTANT AF SETTING ................................................................................. 210 xF DEPTH-OF-FIELD SCALE........................................................................... 210 xF AF RANGE LIMITER....................................................................................... 210 F TOUCH SCREEN MODE .................................................................................... 211 FOCUS CHECK LOCK ................................................................................................ 213 xviii Table of Contents AUDIO SETTING (Movie Recording).........................................................214 INTERNAL MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT............................................................... 214 EXTERNAL MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT.............................................................. 214 MIC JACK SETTING..................................................................................................... 214 MIC LEVEL LIMITER .................................................................................................... 215 WIND FILTER .................................................................................................................. 215 LOW CUT FILTER .......................................................................................................... 215 HEADPHONES VOLUME ......................................................................................... 215 MIC/REMOTE RELEASE ............................................................................................ 215 XLR MIC ADAPTER SETTING................................................................................. 216 TIME CODE SETTING (Movie Recording)................................................217 TIME CODE DISPLAY ................................................................................................. 217 START TIME SETTING ................................................................................................ 217 COUNT UP SETTING.................................................................................................. 217 DROP FRAME ................................................................................................................ 218 HDMI TIME CODE OUTPUT ................................................................................... 218 7 Playback and the Playback Menu 219 The Playback Display ....................................................................................220 The DISP/BACK Button............................................................................................ 221 Viewing Pictures .............................................................................................223 Playback Zoom ............................................................................................................ 224 Multi-Frame Playback .............................................................................................. 224 The Playback Menu .......................................................................................225 RAW CONVERSION .................................................................................................... 225 HEIF TO JPEG/TIFF CONVERSION ...................................................................... 228 ERASE ................................................................................................................................. 229 CROP .................................................................................................................................. 231 RESIZE ................................................................................................................................ 232 PROTECT .......................................................................................................................... 233 IMAGE ROTATE ............................................................................................................. 234 VOICE MEMO SETTING............................................................................................ 235 RATING .............................................................................................................................. 236 TRANSFER IMAGE TO SMARTPHONE.............................................................. 237 xF WIRELESS COMMUNICATION................................................................ 239 SLIDE SHOW .................................................................................................................. 239 PHOTOBOOK ASSIST ................................................................................................ 240 xix PRINT ORDER (DPOF) ............................................................................................... 242 instax PRINTER PRINT ............................................................................................... 243 DISP ASPECT.................................................................................................................. 244 8 Network/USB Features and Settings 245 Overview ...........................................................................................................246 Supported Features .................................................................................................. 246 Connecting to Smartphones (Bluetooth)..............................................247 Installing Smartphone Apps ............................................................................... 247 Connecting to a Smartphone ............................................................................ 247 Using the Smartphone App ................................................................................ 249 Connecting to Smartphones (USB) .........................................................250 Copying Pictures to a Smartphone ................................................................ 250 Connecting the Camera and Computer ..................................................... 253 Using the Camera as a Webcam ...............................................................255 instax SHARE Printers ...................................................................................256 Establishing a Connection.................................................................................... 256 Printing Pictures .......................................................................................................... 257 Tethered Photography .................................................................................258 Tethered Photography via USB.......................................................................... 258 Tethered Photography via Wireless LAN ..................................................... 259 RAW Processing ..............................................................................................260 Saving and Loading Settings .....................................................................261 Saving and Loading Settings Using a Computer ................................... 261 Network/USB Setting Menus .....................................................................262 Bluetooth/SMARTPHONE SETTING ................................................................. 262 AIRPLANE MODE ........................................................................................................ 265 NETWORK SETTING .................................................................................................. 265 instax PRINTER CONNECTION SETTING........................................................ 265 CONNECTION MODE ............................................................................................... 266 USB POWER SUPPLY/COMM SETTING .......................................................... 268 INFORMATION .............................................................................................................. 268 RESET WIRELESS SETTING ..................................................................................... 268 xx Table of Contents 9 The Setup Menus 269 USER SETTING .................................................................................................270 FORMAT............................................................................................................................ 270 b AREA SETTING..................................................................................................... 271 DATE/TIME ...................................................................................................................... 271 TIME DIFFERENCE....................................................................................................... 272 Qa ............................................................................................................... 272 x MY MENU SETTING............................................................................................ 273 F MY MENU SETTING ............................................................................................ 273 SENSOR CLEANING ................................................................................................... 273 BATTERY AGE ................................................................................................................ 273 SOUND & FLASH ......................................................................................................... 274 RESET ................................................................................................................................. 274 REGULATORY................................................................................................................. 274 SOUND SETTING .............................................................................................275 AF BEEP VOL. ................................................................................................................. 275 SELF-TIMER BEEP VOL. ............................................................................................. 275 OPERATION VOL. ......................................................................................................... 275 F REC START/STOP VOLUME ............................................................................. 276 t ELECTRONIC SHUTTER VOLUME ............................................................... 276 t ELECTRONIC SHUTTER SOUND ................................................................. 276 s ELECTRONIC SHUTTER VOLUME ............................................................... 277 s ELECTRONIC SHUTTER SOUND ................................................................. 277 PLAYBACK VOLUME .................................................................................................. 277 4ch AUDIO PLAYBACK ............................................................................................. 277 SCREEN SETTING ............................................................................................278 VIEW MODE SETTING............................................................................................... 278 EVF BRIGHTNESS ......................................................................................................... 278 EVF COLOR ..................................................................................................................... 278 EVF COLOR ADJUSTMENT..................................................................................... 279 LCD BRIGHTNESS ........................................................................................................ 279 LCD COLOR .................................................................................................................... 279 LCD COLOR ADJUSTMENT.................................................................................... 279 xxi IMAGE DISP. .................................................................................................................... 280 AUTOROTATE DISPLAYS .......................................................................................... 280 PREVIEW EXP./WB IN MANUAL MODE ........................................................... 281 NATURAL LIVE VIEW .................................................................................................. 281 F-Log VIEW ASSIST ..................................................................................................... 282 ELECTRONIC LEVEL SETTING .............................................................................. 282 FRAMING GUIDELINE ............................................................................................... 282 AUTOROTATE PB.......................................................................................................... 283 FOCUS SCALE UNITS ................................................................................................ 283 APERTURE UNIT FOR CINEMA LENS................................................................ 283 DISP. CUSTOM SETTING .......................................................................................... 283 LARGE INDICATORS MODE(EVF) ....................................................................... 284 LARGE INDICATORS MODE(LCD) ...................................................................... 285 LARGE INDICATORS DISP. SETTING .................................................................. 286 INFORMATION CONTRAST ADJ.......................................................................... 287 LOCATION INFO........................................................................................................... 287 x Q MENU BACKGROUND ................................................................................. 288 F Q MENU BACKGROUND ................................................................................. 288 BUTTON/DIAL SETTING................................................................................289 FOCUS LEVER SETTING ........................................................................................... 289 x EDIT/SAVE QUICK MENU ................................................................................ 290 F EDIT/SAVE QUICK MENU ................................................................................ 290 FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING........................................................................................ 290 POWER ZOOM LENS FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING ........................................ 290 COMMAND DIAL SETTING ................................................................................... 291 o S.S OPERATION .................................................................................................... 291 COMMAND DIAL DIRECTION.............................................................................. 291 SHUTTER AF................................................................................................................... 292 SHUTTER AE................................................................................................................... 292 SHOOT WITHOUT LENS .......................................................................................... 293 SHOOT WITHOUT CARD......................................................................................... 293 LENS ZOOM/FOCUS SETTING ............................................................................ 294 AE/AF-LOCK MODE ................................................................................................... 296 AWB-LOCK MODE ...................................................................................................... 296 a ISO BUTTON SETTING ...................................................................................... 297 TOUCH SCREEN SETTING ...................................................................................... 298 LOCK................................................................................................................................... 300 xxii Table of Contents POWER MANAGEMENT ................................................................................301 AUTO POWER OFF ..................................................................................................... 301 PERFORMANCE ............................................................................................................ 301 EVF/LCD BOOST SETTING ..................................................................................... 302 AUTO POWER OFF TEMP. ....................................................................................... 302 SAVE DATA SETTING ......................................................................................303 FRAME NO. ..................................................................................................................... 303 EDIT FILE NAME ........................................................................................................... 304 SELECT FOLDER........................................................................................................... 304 COPYRIGHT INFO........................................................................................................ 305 GEOTAGGING ................................................................................................................ 305 10Shortcuts 307 11Peripherals and Optional Accessories 329 Shortcut Options ............................................................................................308 MY MENU ..........................................................................................................309 MY MENU SETTING ................................................................................................... 309 The Quick Menu .............................................................................................311 The Quick Menu Display........................................................................................ 311 Viewing and Changing Settings ....................................................................... 313 Editing the Quick Menu ......................................................................................... 314 Function Controls...........................................................................................317 The Function Buttons .............................................................................................. 317 The Function Dial ....................................................................................................... 320 Touch-Function Gestures ...................................................................................... 322 Lens Function Buttons ............................................................................................ 325 Lenses.................................................................................................................330 Lens Parts ........................................................................................................................ 330 Lens Care ......................................................................................................................... 331 Removing Lens Caps ............................................................................................... 331 Attaching Lens Hoods ............................................................................................ 332 Lenses with Aperture Rings................................................................................. 333 Lenses with No Aperture Rings ......................................................................... 334 Lenses with O.I.S. Switches ................................................................................... 334 Manual Focus Lenses ............................................................................................... 335 Power Zoom Lenses ................................................................................................. 336 xxiii Table of Contents External Flash Units .......................................................................................337 Using an External Flash .......................................................................................... 338 SYNC TERMINAL .......................................................................................................... 339 SHOE MOUNT FLASH............................................................................................... 340 COMMANDER(OPTICAL) ........................................................................................ 343 Cooling Fans ....................................................................................................347 Attaching a Cooling Fan ........................................................................................ 347 Using the Fan................................................................................................................ 348 12Technical Notes 349 Accessories from Fujifilm.............................................................................350 Software for Use with Your Camera .........................................................352 Smartphone Apps ..................................................................................................... 352 RAW FILE CONVERTER EX powered by SILKYPIX..................................... 352 Capture One Express for Fujifilm ...................................................................... 353 Capture One for Fujifilm ........................................................................................ 353 FUJIFILM Tether Shooting Plug-in (Exclusively for Lightroom) ...... 353 FUJIFILM X Acquire ................................................................................................... 354 FUJIFILM X RAW STUDIO ....................................................................................... 354 For Your Safety ................................................................................................355 Product Care ....................................................................................................366 Cleaning the Image Sensor ........................................................................367 Firmware Updates..........................................................................................368 Checking the Firmware Version ........................................................................ 368 Troubleshooting .............................................................................................369 Warning Messages and Displays ..............................................................382 Memory Card Capacity ................................................................................387 Specifications ..................................................................................................388 xxiv Supplied Accessories The following are included with the camera: • NP-W235 rechargeable battery O For reasons of safety, the battery is not charged at shipment. The camera will not function if the battery is not charged; be sure to charge the battery before use (P 37). • AC-5VJ AC power adapter • Plug adapter • USB cable (approx. 0.6 m/2 ft.) • Body cap (comes attached to camera) • Shoulder strap • Cooling fan connector cover (comes attached to camera) N • If you purchased a lens kit, check that a lens is included. • The plug adapter supplied varies with the country or region. • For information on compatible computer software, see “Software for Use with Your Camera” (P 352). xxv About This Manual This manual contains instructions for your FUJIFILM X-S20 digital camera. Be sure you have read and understood its contents before proceeding. Symbols and Conventions The following symbols are used in this manual: O Information that should be read to prevent damage to the product. Additional information that may be helpful when using the N product. P Pages on which related information may be found. Menus and other text in the displays are shown in bold. Illustrations are for explanatory purposes only; drawings may be simplified, while photographs are not necessarily taken with the model of camera described in this manual. Terminology The optional SD, SDHC, and SDXC memory cards the camera uses to store pictures are referred to as “memory cards”. The electronic viewfinder may be referred to as the “EVF” and the LCD monitor as the “LCD”. Smartphones and tablets are referred to as “smartphones”. xxvi Before You Begin 1 Parts of the Camera 1 Before You Begin A t (movie recording) button.......................56 B Q (quick menu) button ...............................311 C ISO button ......................................................317 D Rear command dial ................................6, 223 E Mode dial .............................................. 4, 48, 56 F Hot shoe .........................................................338 G Microphone ............................................ 61, 214 H Fn (function) dial .....................................7, 320 I N (flash pop-up) lever................................123 J Microphone/remote release connector cover N Lens signal contacts O Lens release button ........................................33 P AF-assist illuminator...................................155 Q R S T U V K Strap clip............................................................32 W L Connector cover M Speaker .................................................... 63, 277 X Self-timer lamp ............................................169 Tally light ........................................................200 Front command dial........................................6 ON/OFF switch .................................................41 Shutter button .................................................49 Flash ................................................................123 Body cap............................................................33 Microphone/remote release connector (⌀3.5 mm) ........................................... 61, 215 USB connector (Type-C) ..................... 37, 246 HDMI Micro connector (Type D) ................51 O V Use of an optional RR-100 remote release requires a third-party adapter to convert the three-pin, ⌀2.5 mm connector to a threepin, ⌀3.5 mm connector. 2 Parts of the Camera 1 Before You Begin Y I (drive) button .....................................5, 110 l Battery-chamber cover .................................34 b (delete) button ...........................................53 m DISP (display)/BACK button ............... 17, 221 x(Bluetooth) button ..................................247 Z a (playback) button ...................................50 a Diopter adjustment control ...........................9 n MENU/OK button .............................................22 o Tripod mount b Electronic viewfinder (EVF) ..................................................... 10, 14, 17, 25 p Vari-angle LCD monitor.................... 9, 12, 14 Touch screen .................................25, 165, 298 c Fn button........................................................317 d AEL (exposure lock) button ..............109, 317 q Eye sensor..........................................................15 e AFON button .........................................109, 317 r Headphone jack (⌀3.5 mm) .....................215 f Indicator lamp ..........................................8, 200 s Memory card slot............................................34 Tally light ........................................................200 t Battery latch .....................................................35 g Strap clip............................................................32 u Battery chamber .............................................34 v Serial number plate..........................................7 h Headphone jack cover i Focus stick (focus lever)...................5, 97, 289 w Cooling fan connector cover ....................347 x Cooling fan connector ...............................347 j Cable channel cover for DC coupler k Battery-chamber cover latch ......................34 y Hole to screw cooling fan..........................347 3 The Mode Dial To select a shooting mode, rotate the dial until the icon for the desired mode aligns with the index. 1 Before You Begin Mode Description P A AUTO (AUTO) The camera automatically optimizes settings to the scene. You also have the 48 option of choosing the desired scene mode yourself. B P (PROGRAM AE) Aperture and shutter speed can be ad71 justed using program shift. C S (SHUTTER PRIORITY AE) Select for full control over camera set- 73 tings, including aperture (M and A) 75 and/or shutter speed (M and S). 77 A (APERTURE PRIORITY AE) M (MANUAL) D C1/C2/C3/C4 (CUSTOM 1/2/3/4) Take pictures using previously-stored settings. E FILTER (FILTER) F F (MOVIE) G Vlog (Video blog) 4 82 Take photos with filter effects. 81 Record movies. 57 Record movies at settings suitable for 58 vlogs (video blogs). Parts of the Camera The Focus Stick (Focus Lever) Tilt or press the focus stick to select the focus area. The focus stick can also be used to navigate the menus. 1 I (Drive) Button Pressing the I (drive) button displays drive-mode menu, where you can choose from the following the drive modes. Mode B Single frame P 68 Mode BKT Bracketing 112 P J High-speed burst 115 h HDR 116 O Low-speed burst 115 u Panorama 118 W ISO BKT 111 j Multiple exposure 121 V WHITE BALANCE BKT 111 5 Before You Begin N • To choose the role played by the focus stick, press and hold the center of the stick or use D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > FOCUS LEVER SETTING. • Use G AF/MF SETTING > xF WRAP FOCUS POINT to choose whether focus-area selection is bounded by the borders of the display or “wraps around” from one edge of the display to another. The Command Dials The rear and front command dials are used for the operations below. Front command dial Rear command dial 1 Before You Begin AUTO Choose an auto/scene mode. P Shooting 1 S A M Choose the desired combination of shutter speed and aperture (program shift). Choose a shutter speed. Adjust aperture. 2 Adjust aperture. 2 FILTER Program shift. Menus Q Menu Playback Select menu tabs or page through menus. Select items in the quick menu. View other pictures. Adjust exposure compensation. Choose a shutter speed. Adjust exposure compensation. Highlight menu items. Adjust settings in the quick menu. • Zoom in or out (full-frame playback). • Zoom in or out (multi-frame playback). 1 Can be changed using D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > COMMAND DIAL SETTING. 2 Applies if the lens has no aperture ring or if an aperture ring with an “A” position is in the A position. N The rotation direction for the command dials can be selected using D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > COMMAND DIAL DIRECTION. 6 Parts of the Camera The Fn (Function) Dial Rotate the function dial to quickly adjust settings for the assigned function during shooting. Mode FILTER (FILTER) P (PROGRAM AE) S (SHUTTER PRIORITY AE) A (APERTURE PRIORITY AE) M (MANUAL) AUTO (AUTO) Vlog (Video blog) F (MOVIE) C1/C2/C3/C4 (CUSTOM) Description Filter selection Film simulation N The role performed by the function dial can be chosen using D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING (P 320). The Serial Number Plate Do not remove the serial number plate, which provides the CMIIT ID, serial number, and other important information. Serial number plate 7 1 Before You Begin At shipment, the dial is assigned the DEFAULT role. At this setting, the function performed by the dial varies with the position of the mode dial. The Indicator Lamp Camera status is shown by the indicator lamp. 1 Before You Begin Indicator lamp Glows green Blinks green Blinks green and orange Glows orange Blinks orange Blinks red Camera status Focus locked. Focus or slow shutter speed warning. Pictures can be taken. • Camera on: Recording pictures, or picture displayed for confirmation after being taken with option other than OFF selected for D SCREEN SET-UP > IMAGE DISP. (additional pictures can be taken). off: Uploading pictures to a smartphone or tab• Camera let. * Recording pictures. No additional pictures can be taken at this time. Flash charging; flash will not fire when picture is taken. Lens or memory error. * Displayed only if pictures are selected for upload. N • Warnings may also appear in the display. • The indicator lamp remains off while your eye is to the viewfinder. • The B MOVIE SETTING > TALLY LIGHT option can be used to choose the lamp (indicator or AF-assist) that lights during movie recording and whether the lamp blinks or remains steady. • The indicator lamp blinks green whenever the displays are off during interval-timer photography. 8 Parts of the Camera The LCD Monitor You can adjust the angle of the LCD monitor when framing shots, but be careful not to trap your fingers or other objects. 1 Before You Begin O • Do not apply excessive force to the hinge when rotating the LCD monitor, as this could damage the hinge. • Be careful that the corners of the monitor do not contact the camera body, as this could leave marks. N The LCD monitor also functions as a touch screen that can be used for: • Touch photography (P 26) • Focus area selection (P 25) • Function selection (P 28) • Movie optimized control oL (P 27) • Playback (P 30) Focusing the Viewfinder If the indicators displayed in the viewfinder are blurred, put your eye to the viewfinder and rotate the diopter adjustment control until the display is in sharp focus. 9 Camera Displays This section lists the indicators that may be displayed during shooting. O For illustrative purposes, displays are shown with all indicators lit. The Electronic Viewfinder 1 KL M N O P R S Before You Begin E FGHIJ U V Y T Q Z a b 8 7 6 5 4 3 c d e f 2 g 1 0 z h u ts y xw v 10 W X r q pon m l k ji Camera Displays elapsed recording time ..............................56 U Destination for movie recording .............190 V Number of available frames 1...................387 W Image size ......................................................128 X File format......................................................191 Y Image quality................................................129 Z HEIF format ...................................................131 a Date and time..................................43, 45, 271 b Product priority mode ................................208 c Touch screen mode .............................. 25, 165 d Background defocus mode.......................188 e Cooling fan settings ...........................177, 347 f Temperature warning ......................... 35, 386 g Control lock 3 .................................................300 h Boost mode ...................................................302 i Power supply....................................................39 j Histogram .........................................................20 k Battery level ......................................................42 l Sensitivity .......................................................104 m Exposure compensation ............................107 n Aperture...............................................71, 75, 77 o Distance indicator 2 .....................................101 p Shutter speed .....................................71, 73, 77 q TTL lock ..................................................179, 320 r AE lock....................................................109, 296 s Metering .........................................................106 t Shooting mode ...............................................68 u Custom modes ................................................82 v Focus mode 2 ....................................................92 w Focus indicator 2 ..............................................93 x Manual focus indicator 2 .................... 92, 100 y AF lock....................................................109, 296 z Time code.......................................................217 0 Microphone input channel..............184, 216 1 Recording level 2 ...........................................214 2 Exposure indicator................................ 77, 107 3 Virtual horizon.................................................21 4 Focus frame ............................................ 96, 108 5 Bluetooth host ..............................................247 6 Location data download status.....247, 305 7 Depth-of-field preview........................ 76, 101 8 Focus check ..........................................102, 161 1 Shows “9999” if there is space for over 9999 frames. 2 Not displayed when ON is selected for D SCREEN SET-UP > LARGE INDICATORS MODE(EVF). 3 Displayed when controls have been locked by pressing and holding the MENU/OK button. Control lock can be ended by pressing and holding the MENU/OK button again. 11 1 Before You Begin A Crop factor .....................................................194 B IS mode 2 .........................................................176 C Flash (TTL) mode .........................................340 D Flash compensation ...................................340 E Movie compression .....................................191 F Self-timer indicator ............................169, 190 G Continuous mode........................................115 H Shutter type ...................................................172 I AF+MF indicator 2 .......................................160 J Bluetooth ON/OFF K White balance ..............................................136 L AWB lock ........................................................296 M Film simulation ............................................132 N F-Log/HLG recording ..................................195 O Dynamic range ............................................140 P D-range priority ...........................................140 Q Image transfer status ........................247, 262 R Movie mode ........................................... 56, 187 S High-speed recording indicator ..............189 T Recording time available/ The LCD Monitor G A BC D 1 I E F H J K N L M O Q R P STUVW 9 8 X Y Before You Begin Z a 7 6 5 b c d e f 4 3 2 1 g wv u 0 z y x 12 ts r q po n m l k j ih Camera Displays elapsed recording time ..............................56 M Date and time..................................43, 45, 271 N Destination for movie recording .............190 O Number of available frames 1 ...................387 P Background defocus mode.......................188 Q Image size ......................................................128 R File format......................................................191 S Image quality................................................129 T Product priority mode ................................208 U HEIF format ...................................................131 V Cooling fan settings ...........................177, 347 W Touch screen mode 3 ............................ 25, 165 X AWB lock ........................................................296 Y White balance ..............................................136 Z Film simulation ............................................132 a F-Log/HLG recording ..................................195 b Dynamic range ............................................140 c D-range priority ...........................................140 d Movie optimized control 3.............................27 e Virtual horizon.................................................21 f Boost mode ...................................................302 g Touch zoom 3 ....................................................29 h Temperature warning ......................... 35, 386 i Control lock 4..................................................300 j Battery level ......................................................42 k Power supply....................................................39 l Sensitivity .......................................................104 m Histogram .........................................................20 n Exposure compensation ............................107 o Distance indicator 2 .....................................101 p Aperture...............................................71, 75, 77 q Time code.......................................................217 r Shutter speed .....................................71, 73, 77 s TTL lock ..................................................179, 320 t AE lock....................................................109, 296 u Metering .........................................................106 v Shooting mode ...............................................68 w Custom modes ................................................82 x Focus mode 2 ....................................................92 y Focus indicator 2 ..............................................93 z Manual focus indicator 2 .................... 92, 100 0 AF lock....................................................109, 296 1 Microphone input channel..............184, 216 2 AF+MF indicator 2 .......................................160 3 Shutter type ...................................................172 4 Recording level 2 ...........................................214 5 Continuous mode........................................115 6 Self-timer indicator ............................169, 190 7 Exposure indicator................................ 77, 107 8 Flash (TTL) mode .........................................340 9 Flash compensation ...................................340 - IS mode 2 .........................................................176 1 Shows “9999” if there is space for over 9999 frames. 2 Not displayed when ON is selected for D SCREEN SET-UP > LARGE INDICATORS MODE(LCD). 3 Camera functions can also be accessed via touch controls. 4 Displayed when controls have been locked by pressing and holding the MENU/OK button. Control lock can be ended by pressing and holding the MENU/OK button again. 13 1 Before You Begin A Crop factor .....................................................194 B Location data download status.....247, 305 C Focus check ..........................................102, 161 D Depth-of-field preview........................ 76, 101 E Movie compression .....................................191 F Image transfer status ........................247, 262 G Bluetooth ON/OFF H Bluetooth host ..............................................247 I Movie mode ........................................... 56, 187 J High-speed recording indicator ..............189 K Focus frame ............................................ 96, 108 L Recording time available/ Choosing a Display Mode Use D SCREEN SET-UP > VIEW MODE SETTING to choose from the following display modes. You can choose separate display modes for shooting and playback. N You can also assign VIEW MODE SETTING to a function button and use it to switch between the EVF and LCD monitor. 1 Before You Begin SHOOTING Option Description Putting your eye to the viewfinder turns the viewfinder on and the LCD monitor off ; taking your eye away turns E EYE SENSOR the viewfinder off and LCD monitor on. LCD ONLY LCD monitor on, viewfinder off. EVF ONLY Viewfinder on, LCD monitor off. Putting your eye to the viewfinder turns the viewfinder on; taking it away turns the viewfinder off. The LCD EVF ONLY + E monitor remains off. Putting your eye to the viewfinder during shooting turns the viewfinder on, but the LCD monitor is used for E EYE SENSOR + LCD the display of images once you remove your eye from the viewfinder after shooting. The options selected for IMAGE DISP. D SCREEN SET-UP > IMAGE DISP. apply to display in the LCD monitor. N Go to D SCREEN SET-UP > VIEW MODE SETTING in the setup menu and press the Q button to choose the view modes available. 14 Camera Displays PLAYBACK Option E EYE SENSOR LCD ONLY EVF ONLY Description Putting your eye to the viewfinder turns the viewfinder on and the LCD monitor off ; taking your eye away turns the viewfinder off and LCD monitor on. LCD monitor on, viewfinder off. Viewfinder on, LCD monitor off. 1 Before You Begin The Eye Sensor The eye sensor may respond to objects other than your eye or to light shining directly on the sensor. Eye sensor 15 Adjusting Display Brightness The brightness and saturation of the viewfinder and LCD monitor can be adjusted using the items in the D SCREEN SET-UP menu. Choose EVF BRIGHTNESS or EVF COLOR to adjust viewfinder brightness or saturation, LCD BRIGHTNESS or LCD COLOR to do the same for the LCD monitor. 1 Before You Begin Display Rotation When ON is selected for D SCREEN SET-UP > AUTOROTATE DISPLAYS, the indicators in the viewfinder and LCD monitor automatically rotate to match camera orientation. 16 Camera Displays The DISP/BACK Button The DISP/BACK button controls the display of indicators in the viewfinder and LCD monitor. N Indicators for the EVF and LCD must be selected separately. To choose the EVF display, place your eye to the viewfinder while using the DISP/BACK button. 1 Before You Begin Viewfinder Standard indicators Full screen (no indicators) 5 4 3 2 1 0 -1 -2 -3 -4 -5 1000 12800 17 LCD Monitor Standard indicators No indicators 1 Before You Begin Info display (still photography only) 18 Camera Displays Customizing the Standard Display To choose the items shown in the standard indicator display: Display standard indicators. Use the DISP/BACK button to display standard indicators. 2 Select DISP. CUSTOM SETTING. Select D SCREEN SET-UP > DISP. CUSTOM SETTING in the setup menu. 3 Choose items. Highlight items and press MENU/OK to select or deselect. Item FRAMING GUIDELINE FOCUS FRAME FOCUS INDICATOR AF DISTANCE INDICATOR MF DISTANCE INDICATOR HISTOGRAM LIVE VIEW HIGHLIGHT ALERT SHOOTING MODE APERTURE/S-SPEED/ISO INFORMATION BACKGROUND Expo. Comp. (Digit) Expo. Comp. (Scale) FOCUS MODE PHOTOMETRY SHUTTER TYPE FLASH CONTINUOUS MODE 4 5 Default R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R Item DUAL IS MODE TOUCH SCREEN MODE WHITE BALANCE FILM SIMULATION DYNAMIC RANGE BOOST MODE COOLING FAN SETTING FRAMES REMAINING IMAGE SIZE/QUALITY MOVIE MODE & REC. TIME COMMUNICATION STATUS MIC LEVEL GUIDANCE MESSAGE NO MEMORY CARD WARNING DATE/TIME BATTERY LEVEL FRAMING OUTLINE Default R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R Press DISP/BACK to save changes. Press DISP/BACK as needed to exit the menus and return to the shooting display. 19 1 Before You Begin 1 Framing Outline Enable FRAMING OUTLINE to make the borders of the frame easier to see against dark backgrounds. Histograms Histograms show the distribution of tones in the image. Brightness is shown by the horizontal axis, the number of pixels by the vertical axis. 1 Number of pixels Before You Begin Shadows Highlights Pixel brightness • Optimal exposure: Pixels are distributed in an even curve throughout the tone range. • Overexposed: Pixels are clustered on the right side of the graph. • Underexposed: Pixels are clustered on the left side of the graph. To view separate RGB histograms and a display showing areas of the frame that will be overexposed at current settings superimposed on the view through the lens, press the function button to which HISTOGRAM is assigned (P 290, 317). A Overexposed areas blink B RGB histograms 20 Camera Displays Virtual Horizon Check whether the camera is level. The display type can be chosen using D SCREEN SET-UP > ELECTRONIC LEVEL SETTING. Use the virtual horizon to level the camera when mounting it on a tripod or the like. 2D 3D 1 Roll • OFF: The virtual horizon is not displayed. • 2D: A white line shows the amount the camera is tilted left or right. The line turns green when the camera is level. The line may vanish if the camera is tilted forward or back. • 3D: The display shows whether the camera is tilted left or right and forward or back. N ELECTRONIC LEVEL SWITCH can be assigned to a function button and the button then used to switch between the 2D and 3D displays. 21 Before You Begin Pitch Using the Menus To display the menus, press MENU/OK. 1 Before You Begin The Menus Different menus are displayed during still photography, movie recording, and playback. Still Photography (All Modes Except F (Movie) and Vlog) Pressing MENU/OK during still photography displays the photo menus. IMAGE QUALITY SETTING IMAGE SIZE IMAGE QUALITY RAW RECORDING SELECT JPEG/HEIF FILM SIMULATION MONOCHROMATIC COLOR GRAIN EFFECT COLOR CHROME EFFECT EXIT N In modes C1 through C4, photo menus will be displayed if x STILL is selected for the chosen bank using either H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING > xF CUSTOM MODE SETTING in the photo menus or B MOVIE SETTING > xF CUSTOM MODE SETTING in the movie menus (P 82). 22 Using the Menus Movie Recording (F (Movie) and Vlog Modes) Pressing MENU/OK in movie mode displays the movie menus. MOVIE SETTING MOVIE SETTING LIST SHOOTING MODE MOVIE MODE BACKGROUND DEFOCUS MODE HIGH SPEED REC FSELF-TIMER MEDIA REC SETTING HDMI OUTPUT SETTING 1 N In modes C1 through C4, photo menus will be displayed if F MOVIE is selected for the chosen bank using either H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING > xF CUSTOM MODE SETTING in the photo menus or B MOVIE SETTING > xF CUSTOM MODE SETTING in the movie menus (P 82). Playback Pressing MENU/OK during playback displays the playback menu. PLAY BACK MENU RAW CONVERSION HEIF TO JPEG/TIFF CONVERSION ERASE CROP RESIZE PROTECT IMAGE ROTATE VOICE MEMO SETTING EXIT 23 Before You Begin EXIT Using the Menus Selecting a Menu Tab To navigate the menus: 1 Press MENU/OK to display the menus. 1 Before You Begin IMAGE QUALITY SETTING IMAGE SIZE IMAGE QUALITY RAW RECORDING SELECT JPEG/HEIF FILM SIMULATION MONOCHROMATIC COLOR GRAIN EFFECT COLOR CHROME EFFECT EXIT 2 Press the focus stick (focus lever) left to highlight the tab for the current menu. IMAGE QUALITY SETTING IMAGE SIZE IMAGE QUALITY RAW RECORDING SELECT JPEG/HEIF FILM SIMULATION MONOCHROMATIC COLOR GRAIN EFFECT COLOR CHROME EFFECT EXIT Tab 3 Press the focus stick up or down to highlight the tab containing the desired item. 4 Press the focus stick right to place the cursor in the menu. N Use the front command dial to select menu tabs or page through menus and the rear command dial to highlight menu items. 24 Touch Screen Mode The LCD monitor also functions as a touch screen. TOUCH SCREEN SETTINGS TOUCH SCREEN SETTING DOUBLE TAP SETTING ON TOUCH FUNCTION OFF TOUCH ZOOM TOUCH SCREEN SETTING EVF TOUCH SCREEN AREA SETTINGS EVF The LCD monitor can be used to select the focus area while pictures are being framed in the electronic viewfinder (EVF). Use D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > TOUCH SCREEN SETTING > EVF TOUCH SCREEN AREA SETTINGS to choose the area of the monitor employed for touch controls. N • When FACE DETECTION ON is selected for G AF/MF SETTING > g FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING, you can choose the face used for focus. • You can choose the type of subject on which the camera preferentially focuses when SUBJECT DETECTION ON is selected for G AF/MF SETTING > SUBJECT DETECTION SETTING. 25 1 Before You Begin Shooting Touch Controls To enable touch controls, select ON for D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > TOUCH SCREEN SETTING > x TOUCH SCREEN SETTING. LCD Monitor The operation performed can be selected by tapping the touch screen mode indicator in the display. Touch controls can be used for the following operations: 1 Mode Description Before You Begin Tap your subject in the display to focus and release the shutter. TOUCH In burst mode, pictures will be taken while you keep your finger SHOOTING on the display. • If SINGLE AF is selected for focus mode, the camera will foAF AF OFF cus when you tap your subject in the display. Focus locks at the current distance until you tap the AF OFF icon. • If CONTINUOUS AF is selected for focus mode, the camera will initiate focus when you tap your subject in the display. The camera will continue to adjust focus for changes in the distance to the subject until you tap the AF OFF icon. • When MANUAL FOCUS is selected for focus mode, you can tap the display to focus on the selected subject using autofocus. AREA Tap to select a point for focus or zoom. The focus frame will move to the selected point. OFF Touch screen mode off. O • The behavior of the touch screen varies with the AF mode. • Different touch controls are used during focus zoom (P 166). 26 Touch Screen Mode N • To disable touch controls and hide the touch screen mode indica- tor, select OFF for D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > TOUCH SCREEN SETTING > x TOUCH SCREEN SETTING. • Touch control settings can be adjusted using G AF/MF SETTING > TOUCH SCREEN MODE. For information on the touch controls available during movie recording, see “Movie Recording (F TOUCH SCREEN MODE; P 211)”. • SHUTTER SPEED • APERTURE • EXPOSURE COMPENSATION • ISO • INTERNAL MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT/EXTERNAL MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT 1 Before You Begin MOVIE OPTIMIZED CONTROL oL Selecting ON for B MOVIE SETTING > MOVIE OPTIMIZED CONTROL oL or tapping the movie-optimized mode button in the shooting display optimizes the command dials and touch controls for movie recording. This can be used to prevent camera sounds being recorded with movie footage. Movie-optimized mode button • WIND FILTER • HEADPHONES VOLUME • F FILM SIMULATION • F WHITE BALANCE • F IS MODE • F IS MODE BOOST • F FOCUS MODE N • Enabling movie-optimized controls disables the aperture ring. • When movie-optimized control is enabled, the movie-optimized mode button can be used to change shooting settings or disable movie-optimized control. 27 1 Before You Begin Touch Function Functions can be assigned to the following flick gestures in much the same way as function buttons (P 322): • Flick up: T-Fn1 • Flick left: T-Fn2 • Flick right: T-Fn3 • Flick down: T-Fn4 N • In some cases, touch-function flick ges- INTERNAL MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT L tures display a menu; tap to select the desired option. R 0 -6 -12 -20 -40 -50 dB SET • Touch-function CANCEL gestures are disabled by default. To enable touch-function gestures, select ON for D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > TOUCH SCREEN SETTING > c TOUCH FUNCTION. 28 Touch Screen Mode Touch Zoom If the lens supports touch zoom, you can zoom in and out by touching the display. Tap the touch zoom button in the display to enable touch zoom. 1 Button Touch zoom Zoom in Zoom out Before You Begin Touch zoom is controlled using the buttons in the display. Description Enable touch zoom. Zoom in or out. Touch and hold to zoom in or out at a constant speed. Rocker switch The camera zooms in or out at a speed corresponding to the position of the rocker switch. Disable Disable touch zoom. N The rate at which the camera zooms in and out in response to the T and W buttons can be selected using D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > LENS ZOOM/FOCUS SETTING > CONSTANT SPEED ZOOM (Fn). 29 Touch Screen Mode Playback Touch Controls When ON is selected for D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > TOUCH SCREEN SETTING > a TOUCH SCREEN SETTING, touch controls can be used for the following playback operations: • Swipe: Swipe a finger across the display to 1 view other images. Before You Begin • Pinch-out: Place two fingers on the display and spread them apart to zoom in. • Pinch-in: Place two fingers on the display and slide them together to zoom out. N Pictures can be zoomed out until the entire image is visible but no further. • Double-tap: Tap the display twice to zoom in on the focus point. • Drag: View other areas of the image during playback zoom. 30 First Steps 31 Attaching the Strap Attach the strap. Attach the strap to the two strap clips as shown below. 2 First Steps O To avoid dropping the camera, be sure the strap is correctly secured. 32 Attaching a Lens The camera can be used with lenses for the FUJIFILM X-mount. Remove the body cap from the camera and the rear cap from the lens. Place the lens on mount, keeping the marks on the lens and camera aligned (A), and then rotate the lens until it clicks into place (B). 2 Removing Lenses To remove the lens, turn the camera off, then press the lens release button (A) and rotate the lens as shown (B). O To prevent dust accumulating on the lens or inside the camera, replace the lens caps and camera body cap when the lens is not attached. Lenses and Other Optional Accessories The camera can be used with lenses and accessories for the FUJIFILM X-mount. O Observe the following precautions when attaching or removing (exchanging) lenses. • Check that the lenses are free of dust and other foreign matter. • Do not change lenses in direct sunlight or under another bright light source. Light focused into the interior of the camera could cause it to malfunction. • Attach the lens caps before exchanging lenses. • See the manual provided with the lens for information on use. 33 First Steps O • When attaching lenses, ensure that dust or other foreign matter does not enter the camera. • Be careful not to touch the camera’s internal parts. • Rotate the lens until it clicks securely into place. • Do not press the lens release button while attaching the lens. Inserting the Battery and a Memory Card Insert the battery and memory card as described below. 1 Open the battery-chamber cover. Slide the battery-chamber cover latch as shown and open the battery-chamber cover. O • Do not open the battery-chamber cover when the camera is on. Failure to observe this precaution could damage image files or memory cards. • Do not use excessive force when handling the battery-chamber cover. 2 First Steps 2 Insert the battery as shown. O • Insert the battery in the orientation shown. Do not use force or attempt to insert the battery upside down or backwards. • Confirm that the battery is securely latched. 3 34 Insert the memory card. Inserting the Battery and a Memory Card 4 Close the battery-chamber cover and slide the battery-chamber latch closed. O If the cover does not close, check that the battery is in the correct orientation. Do not attempt to force the cover shut. O The battery may become hot when used in high-temperature environments. Observe caution when removing the battery. Removing Memory Cards To remove the memory card, press it in and release it slowly. The card can then be removed by hand. O • Press the center of the card. • Suddenly removing your finger from the card could cause the card to fall from the slot. Remove your finger slowly. • If the camera displays a p icon, the memory card may be hot to the touch. Wait for the card to cool before removing it. 35 2 First Steps Removing the Battery Before removing the battery, turn the camera off and open the battery-chamber cover. To remove the battery, press the battery latch to the side, and slide the battery out of the camera as shown. Inserting the Battery and a Memory Card 2 Compatible Memory Cards • The camera can be used with SD, SDHC, and SDXC memory cards. Both the UHS-I and UHS-II bus interfaces are supported. • UHS-II cards are recommended for high-speed burst photography. • The types of memory cards suitable for movie recording vary with the settings selected (P 62). • A list of supported memory cards is available on the Fujifilm website. For details, visit: https://fujifilm-x.com/support/compatibility/cameras/. First Steps O • Do not turn the camera off or remove the memory card while the memo- ry card is being formatted or data are being recorded to or deleted from the card. Failure to observe this precaution could damage the card. • Memory cards can be locked, making it impossible to format the card or to record or delete images. Before inserting a memory card, slide the write-protect switch to the unlocked position. • Memory cards are small and can be swallowed; keep out of reach of children. If a child swallows a memory card, seek medical assistance immediately. • miniSD or microSD adapters that are larger or smaller than memory cards may not eject normally; if the card does not eject, take the camera to an authorized service representative. Do not forcibly remove the card. • Do not affix labels or other objects to memory cards. Peeling labels can cause camera malfunction. • Movie recording may be interrupted with some types of memory card. • Formatting a memory card in the camera creates a folder in which pictures are stored. Do not rename or delete this folder or use a computer or other device to edit, delete, or rename image files. Always use the camera to delete pictures; before editing or renaming files, copy them to a computer and edit or rename the copies, not the originals. Renaming the files on the camera can cause problems during playback. 36 Charging the Battery For reasons of safety, the battery is not charged at shipment. The camera will not function if the battery is not charged; be sure to charge the battery before use. Before charging the battery, turn the camera off. O • An NP-W235 rechargeable battery is supplied with the camera. • Charging takes about 180 minutes. 1 Attach the plug adapter to the AC power adapter. Attach the plug adapter as shown, making sure that it is fully inserted and clicks into place on the AC power adapter terminals. 2 First Steps O • The supplied plug adapter is for use exclu- sively with the AC-5VJ AC power adapter. Do not use it with other devices. • The shape of the plug adapter varies with the country of sale. 2 Charge the battery. Connect the camera to the supplied AC power adapter using the supplied USB cable. Then plug the AC power adapter into an indoor power outlet. O • Connect the cable to the camera’s USB connector (Type-C). • Be sure the connectors are fully inserted. 37 Charge Status The indicator lamp shows battery charge status as follows: Indicator lamp Battery status On Battery charging Off Charging complete Blinks Charging error 2 First Steps 38 Charging the Battery O • The supplied AC power adapter is compatible with power supplies of 100 to 240 V (a plug adapter may be needed for overseas use). • Do not use the AC power adapter or USB cable with other devices, as this could cause malfunction. • Do not affix labels or other objects to the battery. Failure to observe N • If the camera is turned on during charging, charging will end and the USB connection will instead be used to power the camera. The battery level will begin to gradually decline (P 268). • The camera will display a “power supply” icon when powered via USB. 39 2 First Steps this precaution could make it impossible to remove the battery from the camera. • Do not short the battery terminals. The battery could overheat. • Read the cautions in “The Battery and Power Supply”. • Use only genuine Fujifilm rechargeable batteries designated for use in this camera. Failure to observe this precaution could result in product malfunction. • Do not remove the labels from the battery or attempt to split or peel the outer casing. • The battery gradually loses its charge when not in use. Charge the battery one or two days before use. • If the battery fails to hold a charge, it has reached the end of its charging life and must be replaced. • Unplug the AC power adapter from the power outlet when it is not in use. • If the battery is left for long periods without charging, you may find that its quality degrades or that it no longer holds a charge. Charge the battery regularly. • Remove dirt from the battery terminals with a clean, dry cloth. Failure to observe this precaution could prevent the battery from charging. • Note that charging times increase at low or high temperatures. • Selecting ON for Bluetooth/SMARTPHONE SETTING > Bluetooth ON/OFF in the network/USB settings menu increases the drain on the battery. Charging the Battery Charging via Computer The camera can be charged via USB. USB charging is available with computers with a manufacturer-approved operating system and USB interface. 2 First Steps Leave the computer on during charging. O • The battery will not charge while the camera is on. • Connect the supplied USB cable. • Connect the camera directly to the computer; do not use a USB hub or keyboard. stops if the computer enters sleep mode. To resume charging, activate the computer and disconnect and reconnect the USB cable. • Charging may not be supported depending on the model of computer, computer settings, and the computer’s current state. • The battery takes about 600 minutes to charge with a charging input of 5 V/500 mA. • Charging 40 Turning the Camera On and Off Use the ON/OFF switch to turn the camera on and off. Slide the switch to ON to turn the camera on, or to OFF to turn the camera off. O Fingerprints and other marks on the lens or viewfinder can affect picN • Pressing the a button during shooting starts playback. • Press the shutter button halfway to return to shooting mode. • The camera will turn off automatically if no operations are performed for the length of time selected for D POWER MANAGEMENT > AUTO POWER OFF. To reactivate the camera after it has turned off automatically, press the shutter button halfway or turn the ON/OFF switch to OFF and then back to ON. 41 First Steps tures or the view through the viewfinder. Keep the lens and viewfinder clean. 2 Checking the Battery Level After turning the camera on, check the battery level in the display. Battery level is shown as follows: 2 First Steps Indicator e f g h i i (red) j (blinks red) 42 Description Battery partially discharged. Battery about 80% full. Battery about 60% full. Battery about 40% full. Battery about 20% full. Low battery. Charge as soon as possible. Battery exhausted. Turn camera off and recharge battery. Basic Setup When you turn the camera on for the first time, you can choose a language and set the camera clock. Follow the steps below when turning the camera on for the first time. 1 Turn the camera on. A language-selection dialog will be displayed. 2 Choose a language. Highlight a language and press MENU/OK. 3 Choose a time zone. When prompted, choose a time zone and turn daylight savings time on or off using the focus stick (focus lever), then highlight SET and press MENU/OK. First Steps 2 AREA SETTING BERLIN/PARIS AREA SETTING GMT ±0:00 DAYLIGHT SAVINGS SET OFF NO N To skip this step, press DISP/BACK. 43 4 Set the clock. DATE/TIME GMT +1:00 BERLIN/PARIS 2023 . 12 . 31 12 00 AM 12h SET 2 5 First Steps View information on the smartphone app. APPLICATION • The camera will display a QR code you can scan with your smartphone IMAGES CAN BE EASILY TRANSFERRED TO THE SMARTPHONE. to open a website where you can download the smartphone app. • Press MENU/OK to proceed to the next step. NO SCAN QR CODE TO ACQUIRE THE APP. SET N Use the smartphone app to download pictures from the camera or control the camera remotely (P 247). 6 Choose an AUTO POWER OFF TEMP.. • The selected setting determines the temperature at which the camera will turn off automatically. • Press MENU/OK to exit to the shooting display. AUTO POWER OFF TEMP. STANDARD HIGH SET THE "AUTO POWER OFF TEMP." TO "HIGH" TO EXTEND THE RECORDING TIME. ONLY RECOMMENDED WHEN NOT HANDHELD OR WHEN USING TRIPOD ETC. SET 7 Format the memory card (P 270). O Format memory cards before first use, and be sure to reformat all memory cards after using them in a computer or other device. N If the battery is removed for an extended period, the camera clock will be reset and the language-selection dialog will be displayed when the camera is turned on. 44 Basic Setup Choosing a Different Language To change the language: 1 Display language options. Select D USER SETTING > Qa. 2 Choose a language. Highlight the desired option and press MENU/OK. Changing the Time and Date To set the camera clock: 2 First Steps 1 Display DATE/TIME options. Select D USER SETTING > DATE/TIME. 2 Set the clock. Press the focus stick (focus lever) left or right to highlight the year, month, day, hour, or minute and press up or down to change. Press MENU/OK to set the clock. 45 MEMO 46 Basic Photography and Playback 47 Taking Photographs This section explains basic photography. 1 Rotate the mode dial to AUTO to view the Y shooting display. The camera will display the type of scene and focus target detected. 3 Basic Photography and Playback O In Y (AUTO) mode, the camera continuously adjusts focus and searches for eyes, increasing the drain on the battery; in addition, the sound of the camera focusing may be audible. 2 Ready the camera. Hold the camera steady with both hands—shaking or unsteady hands can blur your shots. To prevent pictures that are out of focus or too dark (underexposed), keep your fingers and other objects away from the lens and AF-assist illuminator. 48 Taking Photographs 3 Frame the picture. Lenses with Zoom Rings Use the zoom ring to frame the picture in the display. Rotate the ring left to zoom out, right to zoom in. A 4 Focus. Press the shutter button halfway to focus. 3 Focus frame • If the camera is able to focus, the focus frame and focus indicator will glow green. • If the camera is unable to focus, the focus frame will turn red, s will be displayed, and the focus indicator will blink white. the subject is poorly lit, the AF-assist illuminator may light to N • Ifassist the focus operation. • Focus and exposure will lock when the shutter button is pressed halfway. Focus and exposure remain locked while the button is kept in this position (AF/AE lock). • The camera will focus on subjects at any distance in the macro and standard focus ranges for the lens. 5 Shoot. Smoothly press the shutter button the rest of the way down to take the picture. 49 Basic Photography and Playback Focus indicator Viewing Pictures Pictures can be viewed in the viewfinder or LCD monitor. To view pictures full frame, press a. 100-0001 3 Basic Photography and Playback Additional pictures can be viewed by pressing the focus stick (focus lever) left or right or rotating the front command dial. Press the focus stick or rotate the dial right to view pictures in the order recorded, left to view pictures in reverse order. Keep the focus stick pressed to scroll rapidly to the desired frame. N Pictures taken using other cameras are marked with a m (“gift image”) icon to warn that they may not display correctly and that playback zoom may not be available. 50 Viewing Pictures HDMI Output Camera shooting and playback displays can be output to HDMI devices. Connecting to HDMI Devices Connect the camera to TVs or other HDMI devices using a third-party HDMI cable. 1 2 Turn the camera off. Connect the cable as shown below. 3 Basic Photography and Playback Insert into HDMI connector Insert into HDMI Micro connector (Type D) 3 Configure the device for HDMI input as described in the documentation supplied with the device. 4 Turn the camera on. The contents of the camera display will be shown on the HDMI device. The camera display turns off in playback mode (P 52). O • Making sure the connectors are fully inserted. • Use an HDMI cable no more than 1.5 m (4.9 ft.) long. 51 Viewing Pictures Shooting Display live view or movie footage on a TV or save it to an external recorder that supports HDMI input. Playback To start playback, press the camera a button. The camera monitor turns off and pictures and movies are output to the HDMI device. Note that the camera volume controls have no effect on sounds played on the TV; use the television volume controls to adjust the volume. 3 N Some televisions may briefly display a black screen when movie playback begins. Basic Photography and Playback 52 Deleting Pictures Use the b button to delete pictures. O Deleted pictures cannot be recovered. Protect important pictures or copy them to a computer or other storage device before proceeding. 1 With a picture displayed full frame, press the b button and select FRAME. ERASE FRAME SELECTED FRAMES ALL FRAMES 3 Press the focus stick (focus lever) left or right to scroll through pictures and press MENU/OK to delete (a confirmation dialog is not displayed). Repeat to delete additional pictures. N • Protected pictures cannot be deleted. Remove protection from any pictures you wish to delete (P 233). • Pictures can also be deleted from the menus using the C PLAY BACK MENU > ERASE option (P 229). 53 Basic Photography and Playback 2 MEMO 54 Movie Recording and Playback 55 Recording Movies Record movies with sound. Recording Movies Movies can be recorded by pressing the t (movie recording) button or rotating the mode dial to F (movie) or Vlog. The t (Movie Recording) Button Use the t (movie recording) button to quickly and easily record movies while in still photography mode. N The camera automatically selects CONTINUOUS AF for focus mode. 4 1 Press t to start recording. Movie Recording and Playback •A recording indicator (V) is displayed while recording is in progress. • The borders of the display turn red during movie recording, green during high-speed recording. • The time remaining is shown by a Recording time countdown display, while another Time remaining display counts up to show the recording time. 2 56 Press t again to end recording. Recording ends automatically when the maximum length is reached or the memory card is full. Recording Movies F (Movie) Mode For more control over camera settings, rotate the mode dial to F (movie) and record movies using the shutter button. Rotate the mode dial to F (movie). 2 Press the shutter button to start recording. • A recording indicator (V) is displayed while recording is in progress. • The borders of the display turn red during movie recording, green during high-speed recording. • The time remaining is shown by a Recording time countdown display, while another Time remaining display counts up to show the recording time. 3 Press the shutter button again to end recording. Recording ends automatically when the maximum length is reached or the memory card is full. 57 4 Movie Recording and Playback 1 Vlog When the mode dial is rotated to Vlog, the shutter button can be used to record movies at settings appropriate for vlogs (video blogs). Settings can be adjusted using touch controls. N Settings for Vlog mode are stored separately from those used when movies are recorded in F mode or via the t (movie) button. 1 4 Rotate the mode dial to Vlog. Vlog will appear in the display. Movie Recording and Playback To view shooting settings, tap the h button. • Tap i to return to the shooting display. • To exit to full-frame playback, tap j (P 64). SELF-TIMER IS MODE FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING PRODUCT PRIORITY MODE HIGH SPEED REC BACKGROUND DEFOCUS MODE N • Selecting ON for BACKGROUND DEFOCUS MODE fixes aperture at the widest value for the lens. • To maintain focus on an object in the foreground, as for example when filming a product review, select ON for PRODUCT PRIORITY MODE. 58 Recording Movies 2 Press the shutter button to start recording. • A recording indicator (V) is displayed while recording is in progress. • The borders of the display turn red during movie recording, green during high-speed recording. • The time remaining is shown by a Recording time countdown display, while another Time remaining display counts up to show the recording time. 3 Press the shutter button again to end recording. Recording ends automatically when the maximum length is reached or the memory card is full. 4 Movie Recording and Playback 59 O • Sound is recorded via the built-in microphone or an optional external microphone. Do not cover the microphone during recording. • Note that the microphone may pick up lens noise and other sounds made by the camera during recording. • Vertical or horizontal streaks may appear in movies containing very bright subjects. This is normal and does not indicate a malfunction. N • To maximize recording time: - keep the camera out of direct sunlight as much as possible, and - turn the camera off any time it is not in use. • The indicator lamp lights while recording is in progress (the B MOVIE SETTING > TALLY LIGHT option can be used to choose the lamp— indicator or AF-assist—that lights during movie recording and whether the lamp blinks or remains steady). During recording, you can change exposure compensation by up to ±2 EV and adjust zoom using the zoom ring on the lens (if available). • To prevent the borders of the display changing color during movie recording, select OFF for B MOVIE SETTING > F REC FRAME INDICATOR. • While recording is in progress, you can: - Adjust sensitivity - Refocus using any of the following methods: • Press the shutter button halfway • Press a function button to which AF-ON is assigned • Use touch screen controls - Display a histogram or artificial horizon by pressing the button to which HISTOGRAM or ELECTRONIC LEVEL SWITCH has been assigned • Recording may be unavailable at some settings, while in other cases settings may not apply during recording. • To choose the focus area for movie recording, select G AF/MF SETTING > FOCUS AREA and use the focus stick (focus lever) and rear command dial (P 148). 4 Movie Recording and Playback 60 Recording Movies Temperature Warnings The camera automatically turns off to protect itself when its temperature or the temperature of the battery rises. If a temperature warning is displayed, image noise may increase. Turn the camera off and wait for it to cool before turning it on again. Using an External Microphone Sound can be recorded with external microphones that connect using jacks 3.5 mm in diameter; microphones that require plug-in power cannot be used. See the microphone manual for details. XLR Microphone Adapters The camera can be used with TEAC TASCAM CA-XLR2d-F XLR microphone adapters. For more information, visit the TASCAM website. https://tascam.jp/int/product/ca-xlr2d/#CA-XLR2d_Website 4 Movie Recording and Playback 61 Recording Movies 4 Movie Recording and Playback Adjusting Movie Settings Movie settings can be adjusted from the movie menus or using the B MOVIE SETTING item in the photo menus (P 22). • Use the B MOVIE SETTING item in the photo menus to quickly adjust settings when recording movies via the t (movie recording) button (P 181). • The movie menus contain options for use when recording movies via the shutter button in F (movie) mode (P 186). • Settings such as frame rate and frame size can be adjusted using MOVIE MODE. • Use MEDIA REC SETTING for such tasks as choosing the file type, bit rate, and destination. • Focus mode is selected using G AF/MF SETTING > F FOCUS MODE in the movie menus. Regardless of the option selected, the camera will automatically switch to CONTINUOUS AF when FACE DETECTION ON or SUBJECT DETECTION ON is chosen for G AF/MF SETTING > g FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING or SUBJECT DETECTION SETTING. Note, however, that choosing MANUAL FOCUS when FACE DETECTION ON or SUBJECT DETECTION ON is selected disables face and subject detection. O • Changes made using the B MOVIE SETTING item in the photo menus also apply to the movie menus. Changes made in one set of menus automatically apply in the other. • The type of memory card supported varies with the option select for B MOVIE SETTING > MEDIA REC SETTING. - Movies with a bit rate of 360 Mbps can be recorded to cards with a Video Speed Class of V60 or better. - Movies with a bit rate of 100 or 200 Mbps can be recorded to cards with a UHS Speed Class of 3 or better. Depth of Field Choose low f-numbers to soften background details. Aperture can be adjusted when APERTURE PRIORITY AE or MANUAL is selected for B MOVIE SETTING > SHOOTING MODE. 62 Viewing Movies View movies on the camera. Viewing Movies During Playback Any movie selected after the a button is pressed to begin playback will be indicated by a W icon. Press the focus stick (focus lever) down to start movie playback. PLAY AUDIO SET. The following operations can be performed while a movie is displayed: 4 Left/right View other pictures Playback in progress ((x x) Playback paused (y (y) End playback Pause playback Adjust speed Start/resume playback Single frame rewind/ advance Progress is shown in the display during playback. O Do not cover the speaker during playback. STOP PAUSE 63 Movie Recording and Playback Focus stick Full-frame playback (focus lever) View photo Up information Down Start playback N • Press MENU/OK to pause playback and display volume controls. Press the focus stick (focus lever) up or down to adjust the volume; press MENU/OK again to resume playback. Volume can also be adjusted using D SOUND SET-UP > PLAYBACK VOLUME. • To view movies on a television connected via HDMI instead of in the camera monitor, press the a button. Playback Speed Press the focus stick (focus lever) left or right to adjust playback speed during playback. Speed is shown by the number of arrows (M or N). 29m59s Arrows 4 Movie Recording and Playback Viewing Movies During Vlog Recording When the mode dial is rotated to Vlog, you can view your most recent shot by pressing the h button and then tapping j in the display. • Tap the display to begin playback. • Tap m or n to select other shots. • To delete the current shot, tap k. N If you have viewed other items since your last shot, the most-recently viewed item will be displayed. 64 Viewing Movies Playback controls can be displayed by tapping l during playback. 1m23s Control / / Volume Adjust playback volume. Channel selection Adjust audio settings for use when viewing 4ch movies. Close Hide movie playback controls. Back End playback and return to the shooting display. N Volume adjustment and channel selection are not available while playback is in progress. Pause playback to use these controls. 65 4 Movie Recording and Playback Function Pause playback. Tap again to resume. Rewind or advance the movie. When playback Rewind/advance paused, you can tap these buttons to rewind or advance a frame at a time. Pause MEMO 66 Taking Photographs 67 Choosing a Shooting Mode Choose a shooting mode according to the scene or type of subject. Y (AUTO) The camera automatically detects the subject and adjusts focus and chooses a scene mode appropriately. Rotate the mode dial to AUTO to view the shooting display for Y mode. 5 Taking Photographs The camera automatically displays icons showing the selected scene and the type of subject selected for focus. Subject Scene 68 Choosing a Shooting Mode Icon Scene Subject • C : LANDSCAPE • d : NIGHT • h : NIGHT (TRIPOD) • e : MACRO • Q : SUNSET • x : SKY • y : GREENERY • gu : PORTRAIT • E : ANIMAL • F : BIRD • G : AUTOMOBILE Description •h : •g : •c : •a : •b : PORTRAIT BACKLIT PORTRAIT MOVING OBJECT PORTRAIT&MOTION BACKLIT PORTRAIT&MOTION • H : MOTORCYCLE&BIKE • I : AIRPLANE • J : TRAIN O • The mode selected may vary with shooting conditions. The camera may also choose different modes for the same scene depending on shooting conditions. If the mode chosen by the camera does not match the actual scene, you can choose a different mode. • The additional processing time required in some scene modes may increase save times. of scene. 69 Taking Photographs N No icon will be displayed if the camera is unable to determine the type 5 Choosing a Scene Mode After rotating the mode dial to AUTO, you can rotate the front command dial to choose from the scene modes listed below, optimizing camera settings for the selected subject type. Scene Description The camera automatically optimizes settings to suit the scene and subject. Choose for portraits. h PORTRAIT Z PORTRAIT ENHANCER Processes portraits to give the subject a smooth, natural-looking complexion. Choose for daylight shots of buildings and landscapes. M LANDSCAPE Choose when photographing moving subjects. N SPORT Choose for poorly lit twilight or night scenes. O NIGHT Choose this mode for slow shutter speeds when shootH NIGHT (TRIPOD) ing at night. Slow shutter speeds are used to capture the expanding p FIREWORKS burst of light from a firework. Choose this mode to record the vivid colors in sunrises Q SUNSET and sunsets. Choose for crisp, clear shots that capture the brightness R SNOW of scenes dominated by shining white snow. Choose for crisp, clear shots that capture the brightness s BEACH of sunlit beaches. Reduces the blue cast typically associated with underf UNDERWATER water lighting. Capture indoor background lighting under low-light U PARTY conditions. Effective for taking more vivid shots of flowers. V FLOWER Take clear pictures of text or drawings in print. W TEXT Y AUTO 5 Taking Photographs N You can also choose the scene mode via A SHOOTING SETTING > AUTO MODE SETTING. 70 Choosing a Shooting Mode Program AE (P) Let the camera choose shutter speed and aperture for optimal exposure. Other values that produce the same exposure can be selected with program shift. Rotate the mode dial to P. P will appear in the display. 5 speed and aperture displays will show “– – –”. 71 Taking Photographs O If the subject is outside the metering range of the camera, the shutter Program Shift If desired, you can rotate the front command dial to select other combinations of shutter speed and aperture without altering exposure (program shift). Aperture Shutter speed O Program shift is not available in any of the following circumstances: • When TTL is selected for F FLASH SETTING > FLASH FUNCTION SETTING • When an auto option is selected for H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING > DYNAMIC RANGE • In movie mode 5 N To cancel program shift, turn the camera off. Taking Photographs 72 Choosing a Shooting Mode Shutter-Priority AE (S) Choose a shutter speed and let the camera adjust aperture for optimal exposure. 1 Rotate the mode dial to S. S will appear in the display. 5 Rotate the front command dial to choose a shutter speed. N The roles played by the front command dial can be changed using D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > COMMAND DIAL SETTING. O • If the correct exposure cannot be achieved at the selected shutter speed, aperture will be displayed in red. • If the subject is outside the metering range of the camera, the aperture display will show “– – –”. 73 Taking Photographs 2 N • Shutter speed can be adjusted while the AFON button is pressed or the shutter button is pressed halfway. • At shutter speeds slower than 1 second, a count-down timer will be displayed while the exposure is in progress. • To reduce “noise” (mottling) in long time-exposures, select ON for H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING > LONG EXPOSURE NR. Note that this may increase the time needed to record images after shooting. • The picture will go out of focus if the camera is moved during a long time-exposure; use of a tripod is recommended. Time (T) Shutter speeds of 1 s or slower are referred to as “long time-exposures”. Use of a tripod is recommended to prevent the camera moving during the exposure. N A count-down timer will be displayed while the exposure is in progress. 5 Taking Photographs 74 Choosing a Shooting Mode Aperture-Priority AE (A) Choose an aperture and let the camera adjust shutter speed for optimal exposure. 1 Rotate the mode dial to A. A will appear in the display. 5 Rotate the lens aperture ring to choose an aperture. N • If the lens is not equipped with an aperture ring or if the aperture ring is in the A position, aperture can be adjusted by rotating the front command dial. • The roles played by the front command dial can be changed using D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > COMMAND DIAL SETTING. O • If the correct exposure cannot be achieved at the selected aperture, shutter speed will be displayed in red. • If the subject is outside the metering range of the camera, the shutter speed display will show “– – –”. N Aperture can be adjusted even while the shutter button is pressed halfway. 75 Taking Photographs 2 Previewing Depth of Field When PREVIEW DEPTH OF FIELD is assigned to a function button, pressing the button displays a L icon and stops aperture down to the selected setting, allowing depth of field to be previewed in the display (P 317). 5 Taking Photographs 76 Choosing a Shooting Mode Manual Exposure (M) In manual mode, the user controls both shutter speed and aperture. Shots can be deliberately overexposed (brighter) or underexposed (darker), opening the door for a variety of individual creative expression. The amount the picture would be under- or over-exposed at current settings is shown by the exposure indicator; adjust shutter speed and aperture until the desired exposure is reached. 1 Rotate the mode dial to M. M will appear in the display. 5 Taking Photographs 77 2 Rotate the rear command dial to choose a shutter speed and the lens aperture ring to choose an aperture. N • The manual exposure display includes an exposure indicator that shows the amount the picture would be under- or over-exposed at current settings. • If the lens is not equipped with an aperture ring or if the aperture ring is in the A position, aperture can be adjusted by rotating the front command dial. • The roles played by the front and rear command dials can be changed using D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > COMMAND DIAL SETTING. 5 Taking Photographs Bulb (B) Select a shutter speed of BULB for long time-exposures in which you open and close the shutter manually. Use of a tripod is recommended to prevent the camera moving during the exposure. 1 78 Set shutter speed to BULB. Choosing a Shooting Mode 2 Press the shutter button all the way down. • The shutter will remain open for up to 60 minutes while the shutter button is pressed. • The display shows the time elapsed since the exposure started. • Releasing the shutter button closes the shutter, ending the exposure. Processing will begin, and the camera will display the processing time remaining. O Bulb photography is not available in drive modes other than STILL IMAGE or multiple exposure or when the electronic shutter is selected for A SHOOTING SETTING > SHUTTER TYPE. N To reduce “noise” (mottling) in long time-exposures, select ON for H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING > LONG EXPOSURE NR. Note that this may increase the time needed to record images after shooting. 5 Taking Photographs 79 Using a Remote Release A remote release can be used for long time-exposures. When using an optional RR-100 remote release or an electronic release from third-party suppliers, connect it to the camera’s microphone/remote release connector via a third-party ⌀2.5 mm to 3.5 mm adapter. N A confirmation dialog will be displayed if a remote release is connected while the mode dial is rotated to F (movie) or Vlog; press MENU/OK and select n REMOTE for MIC/REMOTE RELEASE. CHECK MIC/REMOTE RELEASE SETTING SET SKIP Exposure Preview To preview exposure in the LCD monitor, select PREVIEW EXP./WB for D SCREEN SET-UP > PREVIEW EXP./WB IN MANUAL MODE. 5 Taking Photographs N Select an option other than PREVIEW EXP./WB when using the flash or on other occasions on which exposure may change when the picture is taken. 80 Choosing a Shooting Mode FILTER Take photos with filter effects. 1 Rotate the mode dial to FILTER. 2 Choose a filter via A SHOOTING SETTING > FILTER SETTING. Filter G TOY CAMERA H MINIATURE I POP COLOR Z LOW-KEY K DYNAMIC TONE X SOFT FOCUS u PARTIAL COLOR (RED) v PARTIAL COLOR (ORANGE) Areas of the image that are the selected color w PARTIAL COLOR (YELLOW) are recorded in that color. All other areas of the x PARTIAL COLOR (GREEN) image are recorded in black-and-white. y PARTIAL COLOR (BLUE) z PARTIAL COLOR (PURPLE) O Depending on the subject and camera settings, images may in some cases be grainy or vary in brightness or hue. 81 5 Taking Photographs J HIGH-KEY Description Choose for a retro toy camera effect. The tops and bottoms of pictures are blurred for a diorama effect. Create high-contrast images with saturated colors. Create bright, low-contrast images. Create uniformly dark tones with few areas of emphasized highlights. Dynamic tone expression is used for a fantasy effect. Create a look that is evenly soft throughout the whole image. Custom Modes Rotate the mode dial to any of modes C1 (CUSTOM 1) through C4 (CUSTOM 4) to take pictures using previously-saved shooting menu settings. Mode Selection: Still Photography or Movie Choose whether the selected custom settings bank (C1 through C4) is for still photography (x STILL) or movie recording (F MOVIE). 1 Navigate to H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING in the photo menus, highlight xF CUSTOM MODE SETTING, and press MENU/OK. N You can also use B MOVIE SETTING > xF CUSTOM MODE SETTING in the movie menus. 5 Taking Photographs 2 Highlight the desired custom settings bank and press MENU/OK. xF CUSTOM MODE SETTING 3 Highlight x STILL or F MOVIE and press MENU/OK. The selected custom settings bank can now be used for still photography or movie recording. xF CUSTOM MODE SETTING 82 x STILL F MOVIE Choosing a Shooting Mode Saving Current Settings Save current settings in a custom settings bank. 1 Navigate to H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING in the photo menus, highlight x EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING, and press MENU/OK. N To save settings for movie recording, navigate to B MOVIE SETTING in the movie menus and select F EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING. 2 Highlight a destination bank for current settings (C1 through C4) and press MENU/OK. EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING CUSTOM 1 CUSTOM 2 CUSTOM 3 CUSTOM 4 ASSIGNED ASSIGNED ASSIGNED ASSIGNED EXIT 3 Highlight OK and press MENU/OK. Current settings will be saved to the selected bank. CUSTOM 1 SAVE CURRENT SETTINGS EDIT/CHECK SAVE THE CHANGES RESET THE CHANGES COPY RESET CUSTOM SETTING EDIT CUSTOM NAME 5 Taking Photographs 4 Highlight SAVE CURRENT SETTINGS and press MENU/OK. SAVE CURRENT SETTINGS CUSTOM 1 SAVE THE CHANGES OK? OK CANCEL 83 Editing Custom Settings Edit existing custom settings banks. 1 Navigate to H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING in the photo menus, highlight x EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING, and press MENU/OK. N To save settings for movie recording, navigate to B MOVIE SETTING in the movie menus and select F EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING. 2 Highlight the desired custom settings bank and press MENU/OK. EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING CUSTOM 1 CUSTOM 2 CUSTOM 3 CUSTOM 4 ASSIGNED ASSIGNED ASSIGNED ASSIGNED EXIT 3 Highlight EDIT/CHECK and press MENU/OK. 4 The camera will display a list of shooting menu items; highlight an item you wish to edit and press MENU/OK. Adjust the selected item as desired. 5 CUSTOM 1 Taking Photographs SAVE CURRENT SETTINGS EDIT/CHECK SAVE THE CHANGES RESET THE CHANGES COPY RESET CUSTOM SETTING EDIT CUSTOM NAME CUSTOM 1 EDIT/CHECK SHOOTING MODE SHUTTER SPEED APERTURE EXP. COMPENSATION DRIVE MODE EXIT 84 Choosing a Shooting Mode 5 Press MENU/OK to save the changes and return to the shooting menu list. Adjust additional items as desired. N If DISABLE is selected for H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING > AUTO UPDATE CUSTOM SETTING in the photo menu or for B MOVIE SETTING > FAUTO UPDATE CUSTOM SETTING in the movie menu, red dots will appear next to the edited items but the changes will not be saved automatically. • To save the changes for selected items, highlight the items in the list and press Q. • To save changes for all items, return to Step 3 and select SAVE THE CHANGES. To cancel all changes and restore the previous settings, select RESET THE CHANGES. • If you copy an item marked by a red dot, the item will be copied with the changes intact. 5 Taking Photographs 85 Copying Custom Settings Copy custom settings from one bank to another, overwriting the settings in the destination bank. If the source bank has been renamed, the name will also be copied to the destination bank. 1 Navigate to H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING in the photo menus, highlight x EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING, and press MENU/OK. N To copy settings for a movie custom settings bank, navigate to B MOVIE SETTING in the movie menus and select F EDIT/ SAVE CUSTOM SETTING. 2 Highlight the source bank and press MENU/OK. EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING CUSTOM 1 CUSTOM 2 CUSTOM 3 CUSTOM 4 ASSIGNED ASSIGNED ASSIGNED ASSIGNED EXIT 5 3 Taking Photographs 86 Highlight COPY and press MENU/OK. CUSTOM 1 SAVE CURRENT SETTINGS EDIT/CHECK SAVE THE CHANGES RESET THE CHANGES COPY RESET CUSTOM SETTING EDIT CUSTOM NAME Choosing a Shooting Mode 4 Highlight the destination bank (C1 through C4) and press MENU/OK. A confirmation dialog will be displayed. COPY TO CUSTOM 1 CUSTOM 2 CUSTOM 3 CUSTOM 4 N Any changes to custom settings in the destination bank will be overwritten. 5 Highlight OK and press MENU/OK. The selected settings will be copied to the destination bank, overwriting any existing settings. COPY CUSTOM 1 CUSTOM 2 COPY OK? OK CANCEL 5 Taking Photographs 87 Resetting Custom Settings Reset selected custom settings banks. 1 Select H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING >x EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING in the shooting menu and press MENU/OK. N This assumes that you wish to reset settings for still photography. To reset movie settings, navigate to B MOVIE SETTING in the movie menus and select F EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING. 2 Highlight the desired custom settings bank and press MENU/OK. EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING CUSTOM 1 CUSTOM 2 CUSTOM 3 CUSTOM 4 ASSIGNED ASSIGNED ASSIGNED ASSIGNED EXIT 3 Highlight RESET CUSTOM SETTING and press MENU/OK. A confirmation dialog will be displayed. 4 Highlight OK and press MENU/OK. The selected bank will be reset. 5 CUSTOM 1 Taking Photographs SAVE CURRENT SETTINGS EDIT/CHECK SAVE THE CHANGES RESET THE CHANGES COPY RESET CUSTOM SETTING EDIT CUSTOM NAME RESET CUSTOM SETTING CUSTOM 1 RESET CUSTOM SETTING OK? RESET ALL SETTINGS TO DEFAULT OK CANCEL 88 Choosing a Shooting Mode Renaming Custom Settings Banks Rename selected custom settings banks. 1 Select H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING >x EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING in the shooting menu and press MENU/OK. N This assumes that you wish to rename settings for still photography. To rename movie settings, navigate to B MOVIE SETTING in the movie menus and select F EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING. 2 Highlight the desired custom settings bank and press MENU/OK. EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING CUSTOM 1 CUSTOM 2 CUSTOM 3 CUSTOM 4 ASSIGNED ASSIGNED ASSIGNED ASSIGNED EXIT 3 CUSTOM 1 SAVE CURRENT SETTINGS EDIT/CHECK SAVE THE CHANGES RESET THE CHANGES COPY RESET CUSTOM SETTING EDIT CUSTOM NAME 5 Enter a new name for the custom settings bank and select SET. The selected bank will be renamed. 89 Taking Photographs 4 Highlight EDIT CUSTOM NAME and press MENU/OK. Choosing a Shooting Mode The Command and Function Dials The roles of the command and Function dials vary with the mode. Front command dial Rear command dial 5 Taking Photographs AUTO (AUTO) P (PROGRAM AE) S (SHUTTER PRIORITY AE) A (APERTURE PRIORITY AE) M (MANUAL) FILTER (FILTER) Vlog C1/C2/C3/C4 (CUSTOM) F (MOVIE) N The Fn (function) dial Auto/ Scene Position Program shift Shutter speed Exposure compensation Film simulation Aperture Shutter speed Program shift Exposure compensation Filter selection Varies with exposure mode role performed by the function dial can be chosen using D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING (P 320). 90 Autofocus Take pictures using autofocus. 1 Select single or continuous AF for G AF/MF SETTING > FOCUS MODE in the shooting menu (P 92). 2 3 Use G AF/MF SETTING > AF MODE to choose an AF mode (P 94). Select G AF/MF SETTING > FOCUS AREA and choose the position and size of the focus frame (P 96). 4 Take pictures. 5 Taking Photographs 91 Focus Mode Choose how the camera focuses. 1 2 Press MENU/OK to display the menus. 3 Choose from the following options: Select G AF/MF SETTING > FOCUS MODE in the shooting menu. Mode Description Focus manually using the lens focus ring. Choose for manp ual control of focus or in situations in which the camera is MANUAL FOCUS unable to focus using autofocus (P 100). Focus is continually adjusted to reflect changes in the disk tance to the subject while the shutter button is pressed CONTINUOUS AF halfway. Use for subjects that are in motion. l 5 SINGLE AF Focus locks while the shutter button is pressed halfway. Choose for stationary subjects. Taking Photographs N • Regardless of the option selected, manual focus will be used when the lens is in manual focus mode. • If ON is selected for G AF/MF SETTING > PRE-AF, focus will be ad- justed continuously in modes l and k even when the shutter button is not pressed. 92 Autofocus The Focus Indicator Focus status is shown by the focus indicator. Focus indicator Focus indicator ( ) z (lights green) (z) (lights green) A (blinks white) j Focus status Camera focusing. Subject in focus; focus locked (focus mode l). Subject in focus (focus mode k). Focus is automatically adjusted for changes in distance to subject. Camera unable to focus. Manual focus (focus mode p). 5 Taking Photographs 93 Autofocus Options (AF Mode) Focus can be adapted to a variety of subjects by changing the combination of settings selected for focus and AF modes. 1 2 3 Press MENU/OK and go to the shooting menu. Select G AF/MF SETTING > AF MODE. Choose an AF mode. How the camera focuses depends on the focus mode. Focus Mode l (SINGLE AF) Option Description Sample image Camera focuses on subject in selected focus point. Use for pinSINGLE POINT point focus on selected subject. r 5 Taking Photographs y ZONE z WIDE j ALL 94 Camera focuses on subject in selected focus zone. Focus zones include multiple focus points, making it easier to focus on subjects in motion. Camera focuses automatically on high-contrast subjects; display shows areas in focus. Rotate the rear command dial in the focus-point selection display (P 97, 98) to cycle through AF modes in the following order: r SINGLE POINT, y ZONE, and z WIDE. Autofocus Focus Mode k (CONTINUOUS AF) Option Description Sample image Focus tracks subject at selected focus point. Use for subjects moving SINGLE POINT toward or away from camera. r y ZONE z TRACKING ALL Focus tracks subjects moving through wide area of frame. 5 Rotate the rear command dial in the focus-point selection display (P 97, 98) to cycle through AF modes in the following order: r SINGLE POINT, y ZONE, and z TRACKING. 95 Taking Photographs j Camera tracks focus in selected focus zone. Use for subjects that are moving fairly predictably. Autofocus Focus-Point Selection Choose a focus point for autofocus. Viewing the Focus-Point Display 1 2 3 Press MENU/OK and go to the shooting menu. Select G AF/MF SETTING > FOCUS AREA to view the focus-point display. Use the focus stick (focus lever) and rear command dial to choose a focus area. N The focus point can also be selected using touch controls (P 25). 5 Taking Photographs 96 Autofocus Selecting a Focus Point Use the focus stick (focus lever) to choose the focus point and the rear command dial to choose the size of the focus frame. The procedure varies with the option selected for AF mode. Rear command dial Focus stick DISP/BACK button AF mode Tilt r y Rotate Choose from 6 frame sizes Select Choose from 3 highlighted focus frame sizes point — Select center focus point N • Manual focus-point selection is not available when z WIDE/ TRACKING is selected in focus mode l. • If j ALL is selected for AF mode, you can rotate the rear command dial in the focus-point selection display to cycle through AF modes in the following order: r SINGLE POINT (6 frame sizes), y ZONE (3 frame sizes), and either z WIDE (focus mode l) or z TRACKING (focus mode k). 97 5 Taking Photographs z Select focus point Press The Focus-Point Display The focus-point display varies with the option selected for AF mode. N Focus frames are shown by small squares (), focus zones by the large squares. r SINGLE POINT 5 Taking Photographs Number of able can be G AF/MF NUMBER POINTS. AF mode y ZONE z WIDE/TRACKING points avail- Choose from zones with Position focus frame over selected using 7 × 7, 5 × 5, or 3 × 3 focus subject you want to track SETTING > points. using continuous AF. OF FOCUS Autofocus Although the camera boasts a high-precision autofocus system, it may be unable to focus on the subjects listed below. • Very shiny subjects such as mirrors or car bodies. • Subjects photographed through a window or other reflective object. • Dark subjects and subjects that absorb rather than reflect light, such as hair or fur. • Insubstantial subjects, such as smoke or flame. • Subjects that show little contrast with the background. • Subjects positioned in front of or behind a high-contrast object that is also in the focus frame (for example, a subject photographed against a backdrop of highly contrasting elements). 98 Autofocus Checking Focus To zoom in on the current focus area for precise focus, press the center of the focus stick (focus lever). Use the focus stick (focus lever) to choose another focus area. Press again to cancel zoom. Normal display Focus zoom 99 5 Taking Photographs N • In focus mode l, zoom can be adjusted by rotating the rear command dial. • In focus mode l, select SINGLE POINT for AF MODE. • Focus zoom is not available in focus mode k or when G AF/MF SETTING > PRE-AF is on. • Use D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > FOCUS LEVER SETTING to change the function performed by the center of the focus stick (focus lever). D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING can also be used to assign focus zoom to other controls (P 317). Manual Focus Adjust focus manually. 1 Select MANUAL FOCUS for G AF/MF SETTING > FOCUS MODE. 2 Focus manually using the lens focus ring. Rotate the ring left to reduce the focus distance, right to increase. A 5 3 Take pictures. Taking Photographs N • Use D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > LENS ZOOM/FOCUS SETTING to reverse the direction of rotation of the focus ring. • Regardless of the option selected, manual focus will be used when the lens is in manual focus mode. 100 Manual Focus Checking Focus A variety of options are available for checking focus in manual focus mode. The Manual Focus Indicator The white line indicates the distance to the subject in the focus area (in meters or feet according to the option selected for D SCREEN SET-UP > FOCUS SCALE UNITS in the setup menu), the blue bar the depth of field, or in other words the distance in front of and behind the subject that appears to be in focus. Focus distance (white line) Depth of field 5 are selected in the D SCREEN SET-UP > DISP. CUSTOM SETTING list, the manual focus indicator can also be viewed using the depthof-field indicator in the standard display. Use the DISP/BACK button to display standard indicators. • Use the G AF/MF SETTING > xF DEPTH-OF-FIELD SCALE option to choose how depth of field is displayed. Choose FILM FORMAT BASIS to help you make practical assessments of depth of field for pictures that will be viewed as prints and the like, PIXEL BASIS to help you assess depth of field for pictures that will be viewed at high resolutions on computers or other electronic displays. 101 Taking Photographs N • If both AF DISTANCE INDICATOR and MF DISTANCE INDICATOR Focus Zoom If ON is selected for G AF/MF SETTING > FOCUS CHECK, the camera will automatically zoom in on the selected focus area when the focus ring is rotated. Press the center of the focus stick (focus lever) to exit zoom. N • You can also initiate focus zoom by pressing the center of the focus stick (focus lever). • Use the focus stick (focus lever) to choose another focus area. • Zoom can be adjusted by rotating the rear command dial. Zoom can- not, however, be adjusted when DIGITAL SPLIT IMAGE or DIGITAL MICROPRISM is selected for MF assist. MF Assist 5 Use G AF/MF SETTING > MF ASSIST (P 161) in the photo menus or G AF/MF SETTING > F MF ASSIST (P 209) in the movie menus to choose a focus check option. Taking Photographs N The focus check options for movies differ from those for still photography. • DIGITAL SPLIT IMAGE: Displays a split image in the center of the frame. Frame the subject in the split-image area and rotate the focus ring until the four parts of the split image are correctly aligned. • DIGITAL MICROPRISM: A grid pattern that emphasizes blur is displayed when the subject is out of focus, disappearing to be replaced by a sharp image when the subject is in focus. 102 Manual Focus • FOCUS PEAK HIGHLIGHT: Highlights high-con- trast outlines. Rotate the focus ring until the subject is highlighted. • FOCUS METER: A meter is displayed below the focus point indicating whether focus is in front of or behind the subject. The needle swings left when focus is in front of the subject and right when it is behind the subject. Adjust focus so the needle is pointing straight up. N The display reverses when Y CCW is selected for D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > LENS ZOOM/FOCUS SETTING > FOCUS RING ROTATE. 5 Taking Photographs 103 Sensitivity Adjust the camera’s sensitivity to light. To view sensitivity settings, press the ISO button. Option AUTO1 AUTO2 AUTO3 160–12800 5 Taking Photographs L (80/100/125) H (25600/51200) Description Sensitivity is automatically adjusted in response to shooting conditions according to combination of standard and maximum sensitivity and minimum shutter speed chosen for A SHOOTING SETTING > ISO. Choose from AUTO1, AUTO2, and AUTO3 (P 105). Adjust sensitivity manually. Selected value is shown in display. Choose for special situations. Note that mottling may appear in pictures taken at H, while L reduces dynamic range. N • Sensitivity is not reset when the camera is turned off. • Pressing the ISO button while the mode dial is rotated to F (movie) or Vlog displays the B MOVIE SETTING > F ISO item in the movie menus. Adjusting Sensitivity High values can be used to reduce blur when lighting is poor, while lower values allow slower shutter speeds or wider apertures in bright light; note, however, that mottling may appear in pictures taken at high sensitivities. 104 Sensitivity AUTO Choose the base sensitivity, maximum sensitivity, and minimum shutter speed for AUTO1, AUTO2, and AUTO3. Item Options DEFAULT SENSITIVITY 160–12800 MAX. SENSITIVITY 400–12800 MIN. SHUTTER SPEED ¼–30 SEC, AUTO AUTO1 800 Default AUTO2 160 3200 AUTO AUTO3 12800 The camera automatically chooses a sensitivity between the default and maximum values; sensitivity is only raised above the default value if the shutter speed required for optimal exposure would be slower than the value selected for MIN. SHUTTER SPEED. N • If the value selected for DEFAULT SENSITIVITY is higher than that 105 5 Taking Photographs selected for MAX. SENSITIVITY, DEFAULT SENSITIVITY will be set to the value selected for MAX. SENSITIVITY. • The camera may select shutter speeds slower than MIN. SHUTTER SPEED if pictures would still be underexposed at the value selected for MAX. SENSITIVITY. • If AUTO is selected for MIN. SHUTTER SPEED, the camera will choose the minimum shutter speed automatically. The minimum shutter speed is not affected by the option selected for image stabilization. Metering Choose how the camera meters exposure. A SHOOTING SETTING > PHOTOMETRY offers a choice of the following metering options: O The selected option will only take effect if OFF is selected for g FACE/ EYE DETECTION SETTING and SUBJECT DETECTION SETTING in the G AF/MF SETTING menu. Mode o MULTI p CENTERWEIGHTED 5 v Taking Photographs SPOT w AVERAGE Description The camera instantly determines exposure based on an analysis of composition, color, and brightness distribution. Recommended in most situations. The camera meters the entire frame but assigns the greatest weight to the area at the center. The camera meters lighting conditions in an area equivalent to 2% of the frame. Recommended with backlit subjects and in other cases in which the background is much brighter or darker than the main subject. Exposure is set to the average for the entire frame. Provides consistent exposure across multiple shots with the same lighting, and is particularly effective for landscapes and portraits of subjects dressed in black or white. N To meter the subject in the selected focus area, choose ON for G AF/ MF SETTING > INTERLOCK SPOT AE & FOCUS AREA (P 162). 106 Exposure Compensation Adjust exposure. Rotate the rear command dial to adjust exposure. N • The command dial used in this role can be chosen using D BUTTON/ DIAL SETTING > COMMAND DIAL SETTING. • If assigned DEFAULT (d WHEN SET TO B), the function dial can be used to adjust exposure when auto ISO sensitivity control is enabled in manual mode. Exposure can also be adjusted by rotating the front or rear command dial after pressing a control to which d WHEN SET TO B (ON/OFF SWITCH) is assigned. although the display may not accurately reflect its effects if: the exposure compensation amount exceeds ±3 EV, W 200% or X 400% is selected for DYNAMIC RANGE, or STRONG or WEAK is selected for D RANGE PRIORITY. Exposure compensation can still be previewed in the viewfinder or LCD monitor by pressing the shutter button halfway. In movie mode, the display may not accurately reflect the effects of exposure compensation during F-log recording or when W 200% or X 400% is selected for F DYNAMIC RANGE. An accurate preview can be obtained by selecting mode M and adjusting exposure directly. - 107 5 Taking Photographs O • The amount of compensation available varies with the shooting mode. • Exposure compensation can be previewed in the shooting display, Focus/Exposure Lock Focus and exposure lock when the shutter button is pressed halfway. 1 Position the subject in the focus frame and press the shutter button halfway to lock focus and exposure. Focus and exposure will remain locked while the shutter button is pressed halfway (AF/AE lock). 2 Press the button all the way down. N Focus and exposure lock via the shutter button is only available when ON is selected for D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > SHUTTER AF, SHUTTER AE. 5 Taking Photographs 108 Focus/Exposure Lock Other Controls Focus and exposure can also be locked using the AEL and AFON buttons. At default settings, you can use the AEL button to lock exposure without locking focus. If the AFON button is assigned AF LOCK ONLY, it can similarly be used to lock focus without locking exposure. AEL button (exposure lock) • While the assigned control is pressed, pressing the shutter button halfway will not end the lock. • If AE&AF ON/OFF SWITCH is selected for D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > AE/ AF-LOCK MODE, the lock can only be ended by pressing the control a second time. AFON button 5 D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING. Exposure and focus lock can also be assigned to other buttons (P 317). 109 Taking Photographs N • The focus lever (focus stick) can be used to reposition the focus point during exposure lock. • The AEL and AFON buttons can be assigned other roles using Bracketing Automatically vary settings over a series of pictures. 1 Press the I (drive) button to display drive-mode menu. 2 Press the focus stick (focus lever) up or down to highlight one of the following: Option W ISO BKT V WHITE BALANCE BKT 5 P 111 111 Option s Bracketing P 112 Taking Photographs 3 Press the focus stick left or right to highlight the desired bracketing settings. 4 5 Press MENU/OK to select. Take pictures. 110 Bracketing W ISO BKT Select a bracketing amount (±1⁄3, ±2⁄3, or ±1) in the drive mode display. Each time the shutter is released, the camera will take a picture at the current sensitivity and process it to create two additional copies, one with sensitivity raised and the other with sensitivity lowered by the selected amount. V WHITE BALANCE BKT Select a bracketing amount (±1, ±2, or ±3) in the drive mode display. Each time the shutter is released, the camera takes one shot and processes it to create three copies: one at the current white balanced setting, one with fine-tuning increased by the selected amount, and another with fine-tuning decreased by the selected amount. 5 Taking Photographs 111 s Bracketing O AE BKT Use A SHOOTING SETTING > AE BKT SETTING to choose the bracketing amount, bracketing order, and number of shots. The camera will take the specified number of shots in sequence: one using the metered value for exposure and the others over- or under-exposed by multiples of the selected bracketing amount. N Regardless of the bracketing amount, exposure will not exceed the limits of the exposure metering system. X FILM SIMULATION BKT Each time the shutter is released, the camera takes one shot and processes it to create copies with different film simulation settings, chosen using A SHOOTING SETTING > FILM SIMULATION BKT. 5 Taking Photographs Y DYNAMIC RANGE BKT Each time the shutter button is pressed, the camera takes three shots with different dynamic ranges: 100% for the first, 200% for the second, and 400% for the third. N While dynamic range bracketing is in effect, sensitivity will be restricted to a minimum of ISO 640; the sensitivity previously in effect is restored when bracketing ends. 112 Bracketing Z FOCUS BKT Each time the shutter button is pressed, the camera takes a series of photos, varying focus with each shot. The A SHOOTING SETTING > FOCUS BKT SETTING item offers a choice of MANUAL and AUTO bracketing. N • Do not adjust zoom during shooting. • Use of a tripod is recommended. MANUAL In MANUAL mode, you choose the following. Option FRAMES STEP INTERVAL Description Choose the number of shots. Choose the amount focus changes with each shot. Choose the interval between shots. Step Frames 1 2 3 4 5 Starting focus position • Focus proceeds from the starting position toward infinity. • Small STEP values translate to small changes in focus, larger values to larger changes. • Regardless of the option chosen for FRAMES, shooting ends when focus reaches infinity. 113 5 Taking Photographs Focus and FRAMES/STEP The relation between focus and the options chosen for FRAMES and STEP is shown in the illustration. Bracketing AUTO In AUTO mode, the camera calculates FRAMES and STEP automatically. 1 Select A SHOOTING SETTING in the shooting menu, highlight FOCUS BKT SETTING, and press MENU/OK. 2 Select AUTO and choose an INTERVAL. The view through the lens will be displayed. 3 Focus on the nearest end of the subject and press MENU/OK. The selected focus distance appears as A on the focus distance indicator. FOCUS BKT SETTING SET POINT A CONTROL THE FOCUS RING SET POINT B SET N The same focus range can be chosen by focusing on the farthest end of the subject first. 5 Taking Photographs 4 Focus on the farthest end of the subject and press DISP/BACK. The selected focus distance (B) and focus range (A to B) appear on the focus distance indicator. FOCUS BKT SETTING SET POINT B CONTROL THE FOCUS RING SET POINT A SET N Instead of pressing the DISP/BACK button, you can press MENU/OK and select A again. 5 Take photographs. The camera will calculate values for FRAMES and STEP automatically. The number of frames will appear in the display. 114 NO Continuous Shooting (Burst Mode) Capture motion in a series of pictures. 1 Press the I (drive) button to display drive-mode menu and select CH HIGH SPEED BURST or CL LOW SPEED BURST. 2 Choose the frame advance rate and press the shutter button to start shooting. Shooting ends when the shutter button is released or the memory card is full. O • High frame-advance rates are available only when s ELECTRONIC SHUTTER is selected for A SHOOTING SETTING > SHUTTER TYPE. • If file numbering reaches 9999 before shooting is complete, the re- Focus and Exposure • Select focus mode CONTINUOUS AF to vary focus with shot. • To vary exposure with each shot, select OFF for D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > SHUTTER AE. N Exposure and focus tracking performance may vary with such factors as aperture, sensitivity, and exposure compensation. 115 5 Taking Photographs maining pictures will be recorded to a new folder. • Shooting ends when the memory card is full; the camera will record all photos shot to that point. Burst shooting may not begin if the space available on the memory card is insufficient. • Frame rates may slow as more shots are taken. • Frame rate varies with the scene, shutter speed, sensitivity, and focus mode. • Depending on shooting conditions, frame rates may slow or the flash may not fire. • Recording times may increase during burst shooting. HDR Each time the shutter button is pressed, the camera takes three shots, varying exposure each time, and combines them into a single picture. The resulting photograph preserves details in highlights and shadows. 1 Press the I (drive) button and select HDR in the drive-mode menu. 2 Choose the amount the brightnesses of the exposures vary. Option HDR AUTO 5 Taking Photographs HDR200 HDR400 HDR800 HDR800+ 3 Description Dynamic range is automatically set to a value of from 200% to 800%. Dynamic range is set to 200%. Dynamic range is set to 400%. Dynamic range is set to 800%. Camera settings are adjusted for maximum variation in dynamic range. Take photographs. The camera will create a combined image. 116 HDR O • Keep the camera steady. • The desired results may not be achieved in the subject moves or the composition or lighting changes during shooting. • The picture will be cropped a very small amount and the resolution will drop slightly. • Mottling may appear in pictures taken at higher values. Choose a value according to the scene. • “Extended” sensitivity values are not supported. • Depending on the options selected for HDR and sensitivity, pictures may not be taken at the selected shutter speed. • The flash does not fire. N HDR images are indicated by a t icon during playback. 5 Taking Photographs 117 Panoramas Follow an on-screen guide to create a panorama. 5 Taking Photographs 1 Press the I (drive) button and select PANORAMA in the drive-mode menu. 2 To select the size of the angle through which you will pan the camera while shooting, press the focus stick (focus lever) left. Highlight a size and press MENU/OK. 3 Press the focus stick right to view a choice of pan directions. Highlight a pan direction and press MENU/OK. 4 Press the shutter button all the way down to start recording. There is no need to keep the shutter button pressed during recording. 5 Pan the camera in the direction shown by the arrow. Shooting ends automatically when the camera is panned to the end of the guides and the panorama is complete. 118 Sweep camera along yellow line in direction of ANGLE DIRECTION Panoramas For Best Results • Move the camera slowly in a small circle at a steady speed • Keep the camera parallel or at right angles to the horizon and be sure to pan only in the direction shown by the guides • Try panning at a different speed if the desired results are not achieved • Prop your elbows against your sides • Use a tripod • For best results, use a lens with a focal length of 35 mm or less (50 mm or less in 35 mm format). O • If the shutter button is pressed all the way down before the panorama is complete, shooting will end and no panorama may be recorded. • The last part of the panorama may not be recorded if shooting ends before the panorama is complete. • Panoramas are created from multiple frames, and the camera may in some cases be unable to stitch the frames together perfectly. • Panoramas may be blurred if the subject is poorly lit. • Shooting may be interrupted if the camera is panned too quickly or • If ON is selected for D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > SHUTTER AE, exposure for the entire panorama is determined by the first frame. 119 5 Taking Photographs too slowly. Panning the camera in a direction other than that shown cancels shooting. • The camera may in some cases record a greater or lesser angle than selected. • The desired results may not be achieved with: - Moving subjects - Subjects close to the camera - Unvarying subjects such as the sky or a field of grass - Subjects that are in constant motion, such as waves and waterfalls - Subjects that undergo marked changes in brightness Panoramas Viewing Panoramas With the panorama displayed full frame, press the focus stick (focus lever) down to start panorama playback. Vertical panoramas will scroll vertically, horizontal panoramas horizontally. PLAY STOP PAUSE • In full-frame playback, you can use the rear command dial to zoom panoramas in or out. • Panorama playback is controlled using the focus stick. 5 Full-frame playback — Start playback Left/right View other pictures Taking Photographs Focus stick (focus lever) Up Down 120 Panorama Panorama playback playback paused End playback Pause playback Resume playback Choose pan Scroll panorama direction manually Multiple Exposures Create a photograph that combines multiple exposures. 1 Press the I (drive) button and select MULTIPLE EXPOSURE in the drivemode menu. 2 Choose a blend mode. Option AVERAGE BRIGHT DARK 3 Take the first shot. 121 5 Taking Photographs ADDITIVE Description The camera adds the exposures together. You may need to lower exposure compensation depending on the number of shots. The camera automatically optimizes exposure for the final picture. The background in series shot without changing the composition will be optimally exposed. The camera compares the exposures and chooses only the brightest pixel at each location. Colors may be mixed depending on their brightness and hue. The camera compares the exposures and chooses only the darkest pixel at each location. Colors may be mixed depending on their brightness and hue. Multiple Exposures 4 Press MENU/OK. The first shot will be shown superimposed on the view through the lens and you will be prompted to take the second shot. NEXT RETRY EXIT N • To return to the previous step and retake the first shot, press the focus stick (focus lever) left. • To save the first shot and exit without creating a multiple exposure, press DISP/BACK. 5 Take the second shot, using the first frame as a guide. EXIT 5 6 Taking Photographs Press MENU/OK. The combined exposures will be displayed as a guide to composing the next shot. RETRY EXIT N • To return to the previous step and retake the second shot, press the focus stick left. • To end shooting and create a multiple exposure from the shots taken to this point, press DISP/BACK. 7 Make additional exposures. Each photograph can contain up to nine exposures. 8 Press DISP/BACK to end shooting. The camera will create the combined image and multiple exposure shooting will end. 122 Flash Photography Use the built-in flash for additional lighting when shooting at night or indoors under low light. Slide the N lever as shown to raise the flash. 2 Select FLASH FUNCTION SETTING in the F FLASH SETTING menu. The camera will display options for the built-in flash. FLASH SETTING FLASH FUNCTION SETTING RED EYE REMOVAL TTL-LOCK MODE LED LIGHT SETTING COMMANDER SETTING CH SETTING 5 EXIT O Sync terminal options will be displayed if the built-in flash is lowered and either no flash unit, or an incompatible flash unit, is mounted on the hot shoe (P 339). Raise the flash before adjusting settings. 123 Taking Photographs 1 3 Highlight items using the focus stick (focus lever) and rotate the rear command dial to change the highlighted setting (P 125). MODE Built-In Flash ADJUST 4 END Press DISP/BACK to put the changes into effect. O • Depending on the distance to the subject, some lenses may cast shadows in photos taken with the flash. • Be careful not to injure yourself on the edges of the raised flash. • The flash will not fire at some settings, for example in panorama mode or when the electronic shutter is used. • Choose shutter speeds slower than 1⁄180 s when using the flash in exposure mode S (shutter-priority AE) or manual (M). 5 N • In TTL mode, the flash may fire several times with each shot. Do not move the camera until shooting is complete. • The flash will not fire if OFF is selected for SOUND & FLASH in the D USER SETTING menu. Taking Photographs 124 Flash Photography Flash Settings The following settings are available with the built-in flash. MODE Built-In Flash ADJUST END Setting 125 5 Taking Photographs Description Choose from the following options: • TTL: TTL mode. Adjust flash compensation (B) and choose a flash mode (C). • M: The flash fires at the selected output (B) regardless of subject brightness or camera settings. Output is expressed in fractions of full power, from ⁄ to ⁄. The desired results A Flash control mode may not be achieved at low values if they exceed the limits of the flash control system; take a test shot and check the results. • C (primary flash): Choose if the flash is being used as a primary flash controlling secondly flash units, for example as part of a studio flash system. • D (OFF): The flash does not fire. B Flash compensation/ Adjust flash level. The options available vary with the flash control mode (A). output Flash Photography Setting C Flash mode (TTL) 5 D Sync Description Choose a flash mode for TTL flash control. The options available vary with the shooting mode (P, S, A, or M) selected. • E (FLASH AUTO): The flash fires only as required; flash level is adjusted according to subject brightness. A p icon displayed when the shutter button is pressed halfway indicates that the flash will fire when the photo is taken. • F (STANDARD): The flash fires with every shot if possible; flash level is adjusted according to subject brightness. The flash will not fire if not fully charged when the shutter is released. • G (SLOW SYNC.): Combine the flash with slow shutter speeds when photographing portrait subjects against a backdrop of night scenery. The flash will not fire if not fully charged when the shutter is released. Choose whether the flash is timed to fire immediately after the shutter opens (H/1ST CURTAIN) or immediately before it closes (I/2ND CURTAIN). 1ST CURTAIN is recommended in most circumstances. Taking Photographs Red-Eye Removal Red-eye removal is available when FLASH is selected for F FLASH SETTING > RED EYE REMOVAL. Red-eye removal minimizes “red-eye” caused when light from the flash is reflected from the subject’s retinas. Flash Sync Speed The flash will synchronize with the shutter at shutter speeds of 1⁄180 s or slower. Optional Flash Units from Fujifilm The camera can be used with optional Fujifilm shoe-mounted flash units. Third-Party Flash Units Do not use third-party flash units that apply over 300 V to the camera hot shoe. 126 The Shooting Menus 127 IMAGE QUALITY SETTING (Still Photography) Adjust image quality settings for still photography. To display image quality settings, press MENU/OK in the photo shooting display and select the H (IMAGE QUALITY SETTING) tab. IMAGE QUALITY SETTING IMAGE SIZE IMAGE QUALITY RAW RECORDING SELECT JPEG/HEIF FILM SIMULATION MONOCHROMATIC COLOR GRAIN EFFECT COLOR CHROME EFFECT EXIT N The options available vary with the shooting mode selected. IMAGE SIZE Choose the size and aspect ratio at which still pictures are recorded. 6 The Shooting Menus Option O3:2 O 16 : 9 Image size 6240 × 4160 6240 × 3512 Option O1:1 Image size 4160 × 4160 Option P3:2 P 16 : 9 Image size 4416 × 2944 4416 × 2488 Option P1:1 Image size 2944 × 2944 Option Q3:2 Q 16 : 9 Image size 3120 × 2080 3120 × 1760 Option Q1:1 Image size 2080 × 2080 The following options are available in SPORTS FINDER MODE and when 1.25X CROP is selected in burst mode: Option P3:2 P 16 : 9 Image size 4992 × 3328 4992 × 2808 Option P1:1 Image size 3328 × 3328 N IMAGE SIZE is not reset when the camera is turned off or another shooting mode is selected. 128 IMAGE QUALITY SETTING (Still Photography) IMAGE QUALITY Choose a file format and compression ratio. Option FINE Description Low compression ratios are used for higher-quality images. Higher compression ratios are used to increase the number of NORMAL images that can be stored. FINE + RAW Record both RAW and fine-quality JPEG or HEIF images. NORMAL + RAW Record both RAW and normal-quality JPEG or HEIF images. RAW Record RAW images only. The Function Buttons To toggle RAW image quality on or off for a single shot, assign RAW to a function button (P 317). Press the button once to select the option in the right column, again to return to the original setting (left column). Option selected by pressing function button to which RAW is assigned FINE + RAW NORMAL + RAW FINE NORMAL FINE 129 6 The Shooting Menus Option currently selected for IMAGE QUALITY FINE NORMAL FINE + RAW NORMAL + RAW RAW RAW RECORDING Choose whether to compress RAW images. Option UNCOMPRESSED Description RAW images are not compressed. RAW images are compressed using a reversible algorithm that reduces file size with no loss of image data. The images can be viewed in Capture One Express for Fujifilm 1, Capture One for Fujifilm 1, Capture One 1, RAW FILE LOSSLESS COMPRESSED CONVERTER EX powered by SILKYPIX 2, FUJIFILM X RAW STUDIO, or other software that supports “lossless” RAW compression. Quality is the same as UNCOMPRESSED, but the resulting files are anywhere from about 30 to 90 percent of their uncompressed size. RAW images are compressed using a “lossy”, non-reversible algorithm. Quality is about the same as UNCOMPRESSED, COMPRESSED but the resulting files are anywhere from about 25 to 35 percent of their uncompressed size. 6 The Shooting Menus 1 For information on when support will be available, visit: https://www.captureone.com/ 2 For information on when support will be available, visit: https://fujifilm-x.com/support/compatibility/software/raw-file-converter-ex-poweredby-silkypix/ 130 IMAGE QUALITY SETTING (Still Photography) SELECT JPEG/HEIF Choose whether pictures are recorded in JPEG or HEIF. Option JPEG HEIF Description Pictures are recorded in the widely-supported JPEG format. Pictures are recorded in HEIF, a format with excellent compression but limited options for viewing and sharing. O • JPEG is automatically selected in place of HEIF during filter-effect, panorama, multiple-exposure, and HDR photography. • Selecting HEIF disables CLARITY and sets COLOR SPACE to sRGB. • HEIF pictures are stored on the memory card as files with the exten- sion “.HIF”. Before the pictures can be viewed on a computer, the extension must be changed to “.HEIC”. This occurs automatically when HEIF pictures are uploaded from the camera to a computer via USB. 6 The Shooting Menus 131 FILM SIMULATION Simulate the effects of different kinds of film, including blackand-white (with or without color filters). Choose a palette according to your subject and creative intent. Option a AUTO Description The camera will automatically select the best film simulation mode according to the scene. This option is available when the mode dial is set to AUTO. c PROVIA/STANDARD Ideal for a wide range of subjects. d Velvia/VIVID Vibrant reproduction, ideal for landscape and nature. e ASTIA/SOFT Softer color and contrast for a more subdued look. i CLASSIC CHROME Soft color and enhanced shadow contrast for a calm look. g PRO Neg. Hi Ideal for portrait with slightly enhanced contrast. 6 h PRO Neg. Std Ideal for portrait with soft gradations and skin tones. The Shooting Menus g CLASSIC Neg. Enhanced color with hard tonality to increase image depth. Amber tinted highlights and rich shadow tone for printed photo look. Soft color and rich shadow tone suitable for film look movie. Unique color with low saturation and high contrast. Suitable for still and movie. n NOSTALGIC Neg. X ETERNA/CINEMA N ETERNA BLEACH BYPASS 132 IMAGE QUALITY SETTING (Still Photography) Option a ACROS b MONOCHROME f SEPIA Description Shoot in Black and White In rich details with sharpness. Available with yellow (Ye), red (R), and green (G) filters, which deepen shades of gray corresponding to hues complementary to the selected color. • d ACROS+Ye FILTER: Slightly enhances contrast and darkens skies. • c ACROS+R FILTER: Enhances contrast and darkens skies considerably. • b ACROS+G FILTER: Produces pleasing skin tones in portrait. Shoots in black and white. Available with yellow (Ye), red (R), and green (G) filters, which deepen shades of gray corresponding to hues complementary to the selected color. • e MONOCHROME+Ye FILTER: Slightly enhances contrast and darkens skies. • d MONOCHROME+R FILTER: Enhances contrast and darkens skies considerably. • f MONOCHROME+G FILTER: Produces pleasing skin tones in portrait. Shoots in sepia tone. https://fujifilm-x.com/global/tag/the-world-of-film-simulation/?post_type=xstories 133 6 The Shooting Menus N • Film simulation options can be combined with tone and sharpness settings. • Film simulation settings can also be accessed via shortcuts (P 308). • For more information, visit: MONOCHROMATIC COLOR Add a reddish or bluish tinge (warm or cool color cast) to the a ACROS and b MONOCHROME monochrome film simulations. Color can be adjusted on the WARM–COOL and G (Green)–M (Magenta) axes. GRAIN EFFECT Add a film grain effect. ROUGHNESS Option STRONG WEAK OFF 6 Description Choose for rougher grains. Choose for smoother grains. Turn the effect off. SIZE The Shooting Menus Option LARGE SMALL 134 Description Choose for coarser grains. Choose for finer grains. MONOCHROMATIC COLOR SET IMAGE QUALITY SETTING (Still Photography) COLOR CHROME EFFECT Increase the range of tones available for rendering colors that tend to be highly saturated, such as reds, yellows, and greens. Option STRONG WEAK OFF Description Choose for a strong effect. Choose for a weak effect. Turn the effect off. COLOR CHROME FX BLUE Increase the range of tones available for rendering blues. Option STRONG WEAK OFF Description Choose for a strong effect. Choose for a weak effect. Turn the effect off. 6 The Shooting Menus 135 WHITE BALANCE For natural colors, choose a white balance option that matches the light source. 6 The Shooting Menus Option WA WHITE PRIORITY AUTO AA AMBIENCE PRIORITY k CUSTOM 1 l CUSTOM 2 m CUSTOM 3 k COLOR TEMPERATURE i DAYLIGHT j SHADE k FLUORESCENT LIGHT-1 l FLUORESCENT LIGHT-2 m FLUORESCENT LIGHT-3 n INCANDESCENT Description White balance is adjusted automatically. Choose for whiter whites in scenes lit by incandescent bulbs. White balance is adjusted automatically. White balance is adjusted automatically. Choose for warmer whites in scenes lit by incandescent bulbs. Measure a value for white balance. Choose a color temperature. For subjects in direct sunlight. For subjects in the shade. Use under “daylight” fluorescent lights. Use under “warm white” fluorescent lights. Use under “cool white” fluorescent lights. Use under incandescent lighting. Reduces the blue cast typically associated with underwater g UNDERWATER lighting. N • In conditions in which AUTO fails to produce the desired results—for example, under certain types of lighting or in close-ups of portrait subjects—use custom white balance or choose a white balance option suited to the light source. • White balance is adjusted for flash lighting only in AUTO, WA WHITE PRIORITY, AA AMBIENCE PRIORITY, and g modes. Turn the flash off using other white balance options. • White balance options can also be accessed via shortcuts (P 308). 136 IMAGE QUALITY SETTING (Still Photography) Fine-Tuning White Balance Pressing MENU/OK after selecting a white balance option displays a fine-tuning dialog; use the focus stick (focus lever) to fine-tune white balance. WB SHIFT SET N • To exit without fine-tuning white balance, press DISP/BACK after selecting a white balance option. • You cannot tilt the focus stick diagonally when fine-tuning white balance. 6 The Shooting Menus 137 6 Custom White Balance Choose k, l, or m to adjust white CUSTOM 1 balance for unusual lighting conditions using a white object as a reference (colored objects can also be used to lend photos a color cast). A white balance tarSHUTTER : NEW WB SHIFT NOT CHANGE get will be displayed; position and size the target so that it is filled by the reference object and press the shutter button all the way down to measure white balance (to select the most recent custom value and exit without measuring white balance, press DISP/BACK, or press MENU/OK to select the most recent value and display the fine-tuning dialog). • If “COMPLETED !” is displayed, press MENU/OK COMPLETED ! to set white balance to the measured value. • If “UNDER” is displayed, raise exposure compensation and try again. SET CANCEL • If “OVER” is displayed, lower exposure compensation and try again. The Shooting Menus k: Color Temperature Adjust white balance to match the color temperature of the light source. N Color temperature can be adjusted to make pictures “warmer” or “colder” or deliberately produce colors that differ radically from those in real life. 138 IMAGE QUALITY SETTING (Still Photography) 1 Select k in the white balance menu. The option currently selected for color temperature will be displayed. WHITE BALANCE COLOR TEMPERATURE R:0 B:0 SET 2 Edit the color temperature using the focus stick (focus lever) and press MENU/OK. A fine-tuning dialog will be displayed. SHIFT COLOR TEMPERATURE SET SHIFT N • You can also adjust color temperature in increments of 10 K by rotating the rear command dial. • Choose from values of from 2500 to 10000 K. • To exit without fine-tuning white balance, press DISP/BACK after choosing a color temperature. Highlight a fine-tuning amount using the focus stick. Press MENU/OK. The changes will be applied. The selected color temperature will appear in the display. 6 Color Temperature Color temperature is an objective measure of the color of a light source, expressed in Kelvin (K). Light sources with a color temperature close to that of direct sunlight appear white; light sources with a lower color temperature have a yellow or red cast, while those with a higher color temperature are tinged with blue. 139 The Shooting Menus 3 4 DYNAMIC RANGE Adjust dynamic range. Wide dynamic ranges reduce loss of detail in highlights for more natural results with high-contrast or backlit scenes. Option Description V 100% Choose for increased contrast. AUTO W 200% Reduce loss of detail in highlights. X 400% O Mottling may appear in pictures taken at higher values. Choose a value according to the scene. N • If AUTO is selected, the camera will automatically choose either V 100% or W 200% according to the subject and shooting conditions. Shutter speed and aperture will be displayed when the shutter button is pressed halfway. • W 200% is available at sensitivities of from ISO 320 to ISO 12800, X 400% at sensitivities of from ISO 640 to 12800. 6 The Shooting Menus D RANGE PRIORITY Reduce loss of detail in highlights and shadows for natural-looking results when photographing high-contrast scenes. Option AUTO STRONG WEAK OFF Description Contrast is adjusted automatically in response to lighting conditions. Adjust dynamic range by a large amount for very high-contrast scenes. Adjust dynamic range by a smaller amount for moderately high-contrast scenes. Contrast reduction off. N • WEAK is available at sensitivities of from ISO 320 to ISO 12800, STRONG at sensitivities of from ISO 640 to 12800. • When an option other than OFF is selected, TONE CURVE, and DYNAMIC RANGE will be adjusted automatically; if you wish to adjust these settings manually, choose OFF. 140 IMAGE QUALITY SETTING (Still Photography) TONE CURVE With reference to a tone curve, adjust the appearance of highlights or shadows, making them harsher or softer. Choose higher values to make shadows and highlights harsher, lower values to make them softer. Option HIGHLIGHTS SHADOWS TONE CURVE HIGHLIGHTS SHADOWS SET CANCEL Description -2 to +4 -2 to +4 COLOR Adjust color density. −4 −3 −2 −1 Options 0 +1 +2 +3 +4 SHARPNESS Sharpen or soften outlines. −3 −2 −1 Options 0 +1 +2 +3 +4 141 The Shooting Menus −4 6 HIGH ISO NR Reduce noise in pictures taken at high sensitivities. Choose higher values to reduce noise and smooth outlines, lower values to leave outlines visible. −4 −3 −2 −1 Options 0 +1 +2 +3 +4 CLARITY Increase definition while altering tones in highlights and shadows as little as possible. Choose higher values for increased definition, lower values for a softer effect. −5 −4 −3 −2 −1 Options 0 +1 +2 +3 +4 +5 O The additional processing required at settings other than 0 increases the time need to save each shot. N Clarity is adjusted automatically when the mode dial is in the AUTO po6 sition. The Shooting Menus LONG EXPOSURE NR Select ON to reduce mottling in long time-exposures. Options ON OFF O The additional processing required when ON is selected increases save times. 142 IMAGE QUALITY SETTING (Still Photography) LENS MODULATION OPTIMIZER Select ON to improve definition by adjusting for diffraction and the slight loss of focus at the periphery of the lens. Options ON OFF COLOR SPACE Choose the gamut of colors available for color reproduction. Option sRGB Adobe RGB Description Recommended in most situations. For commercial printing. PIXEL MAPPING Use this option if you notice bright spots in your pictures. Press MENU/OK in the shooting display and select the H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING tab. 2 Highlight PIXEL MAPPING and press MENU/OK to perform pixel mapping. O • Results are not guaranteed. • Be sure the battery is fully charged before beginning pixel mapping. • Pixel mapping is not available when the camera temperature is elevated. • Processing may take a few seconds. 143 6 The Shooting Menus 1 x EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING Save custom camera settings for commonly-encountered situations. Saved settings can be recalled by rotating the mode dial to positions C1 (CUSTOM 1) through C4 (CUSTOM 4) (P 82). AUTO UPDATE CUSTOM SETTING Choose whether changes to saved custom settings apply automatically. Option ENABLE DISABLE Description Changes to custom settings banks CUSTOM 1 through CUSTOM 4 apply automatically. Changes do not apply automatically. Any changes to custom settings must be applied manually (P 84). xF CUSTOM MODE SETTING Choose whether the current custom settings bank is to be used for still photography or movie recording (P 82). 6 The Shooting Menus 144 IMAGE QUALITY SETTING (Still Photography) xF MOUNT ADAPTOR SETTING Adjust settings for lenses attached via a mount adapter. The camera can store settings for multiple lenses (LENS 1 through LENS 6). N • DISTORTION CORRECTION, COLOR SHADING CORRECTION, and PERIPHERAL ILLUMINATION CORRECTION are available with lenses connected via an M mount adapter. • Any changes made using this item also apply in movie mode (P 205). FOCAL LENGTH SETTING Enter the lens’s true focal length. LENS 5 INPUT FOCAL LENGTH SET 6 LENS5 DISTORTION CORRECTION BARREL STRONG BARREL MEDIUM BARREL WEAK OFF PINCUSHION WEAK PINCUSHION MEDIUM PINCUSHION STRONG The Shooting Menus DISTORTION CORRECTION Choose from STRONG, MEDIUM, or WEAK options to correct BARREL or PINCUSHION distortion. CANCEL 145 COLOR SHADING CORRECTION Color (shading) variations between the center and edges of the frame can be adjusted separately for each corner. To use color shading correction, follow the steps below. NEXT SET 1 Rotate the rear command dial to choose a corner. The selected corner is indicated by a triangle. 2 Use the focus stick (focus lever) to adjust shading until there is no visible difference in color between the selected corner and the center of the image. • Press the focus stick left or right to adjust colors on the cyan–red axis. • Press the focus stick up or down to adjust colors on the blue–yellow axis. N To determine the amount required, adjust color shading correction 6 while taking photos of blue sky or a sheet of gray paper. The Shooting Menus 146 IMAGE QUALITY SETTING (Still Photography) PERIPHERAL ILLUMINATION CORRECTION Choose from values between –5 and +5. Choosing positive values increases peripheral illumination, while choosing negative values reduces peripheral illumination. Positive values are recomSET CANCEL mended for vintage lenses, negative values to create the effect of images taken with an antique lens or a pinhole camera. N To determine the amount required, adjust peripheral illumination correction while taking photos of blue sky or a sheet of gray paper. EDIT LENS NAME Change the lens name. 6 The Shooting Menus 147 AF/MF SETTING (Still Photography) Adjust focus settings for still photography. To display AF/MF settings, press MENU/OK in the photo shooting display and select the G (AF/MF SETTING) tab. AF/MF SETTING FOCUS AREA FOCUS MODE AF MODE AF-C CUSTOM SETTINGS STORE AF MODE BY ORIENTATION AF POINT DISPLAY xF WRAP FOCUS POINT NUMBER OF FOCUS POINTS EXIT N The options available vary with the shooting mode selected. FOCUS AREA Choose the focus area for autofocus, manual focus, and focus zoom (P 96). FOCUS MODE Choose how the camera focuses (P 92). 6 AF MODE Choose how the camera focuses in modes l and k (P 94). The Shooting Menus 148 AF/MF SETTING (Still Photography) AF-C CUSTOM SETTINGS Select focus-tracking options for CONTINUOUS AF focus mode. Choose from Sets 1 (SET 1) through 5 (SET 5) according to your subject or select SET 6 CUSTOM for custom focus-tracking options. AF-C CUSTOM SETTINGS SET 1 MULTI PURPOSE TRACKING SENSITIVITY SPEED TRACKING SENSITIVITY ZONE AREA SWITCHING AUTO OK Option 149 6 The Shooting Menus Description A standard tracking option that works well with SET 1 MULTI PURPOSE the typical range of moving subjects. The focus system attempts to track the chosen SET 2 IGNORE OBSTACLES & subject. Choose with subjects that are hard to CONTINUE TO TRACK SUBJECT keep in the focus area or if other objects are likely to enter the focus area with the subject. The focus system attempts to compensate for SET 3 FOR ACCELERATING/ subject acceleration or deceleration. Choose for DECELERATING SUBJECT subjects prone to rapid changes in velocity. The focus system attempts to focus quickly on SET 4 FOR SUDDENLY APPEARING subjects entering the focus area. Choose for subSUBJECT jects that appear abruptly or when rapidly switching subjects. Choose for hard-to-track subjects prone not only SET 5 FOR ERRATICALLY MOVING to sudden changes in velocity but also to large & ACCEL./DECEL. SUBJECT movements front to back and left to right. Adjust TRACKING SENSITIVITY, SPEED TRACKING SENSITIVITY, and ZONE AREA SET 6 CUSTOM SWITCHING to suit your preferences based on the values for Sets 1–5 (P 150, 152). Focus Tracking Options The individual parameters that are part of a focus tracking set are described below. TRACKING SENSITIVITY This parameter determines how long the camera waits to switch focus when an object enters the focus area behind or in front of the current subject. The higher the value, the longer the camera will wait. TRACKING SENSITIVITY QUICK LOCKED ON SETS THE TRACKING SENSITIVITY ON THE SUBJECT ADJUST 0 1 Options 2 3 SWITCH 4 O • The higher the value, the longer it takes the camera to refocus when you attempt to switch subjects. • The lower the value, the more likely the camera is to switch focus from your subject to other objects in the focus area. 6 The Shooting Menus SPEED TRACKING SENSITIVITY This parameter determines how sensitive the tracking system is to changes in subject velocity. The higher the value, the greater the precision with which the system attempts to respond to sudden movement. 0 Options 1 SPEED TRACKING SENSITIVITY STEADY ACCEL./DECEL. SETS THE SPEED TRACKING SENSITIVITY FOR MOVING SUBJECT ADJUST SWITCH 2 O The higher the value, the more difficulty the camera will have focusing in situations in which autofocus does not perform well, such as when the subject is highly reflective or low in contrast. 150 AF/MF SETTING (Still Photography) ZONE AREA SWITCHING This parameter determines the focus area given priority in zone AF. ZONE AREA SWITCHING CENTER AUTO FRONT SETS THE SWITCHING SENSITIVITY OF FOCUS FRAME IN ZONE AREA ADJUST Option FRONT AUTO CENTER SWITCH Description Zone AF assigns priority to the subjects closest to the camera. The camera locks focus on the subject at the center of the zone and then switches focus areas as necessary to track it. Zone AF assigns priority to subjects in the center of the zone. O This option takes effect only when y ZONE is selected for AF mode. Set Values Parameter values for the different sets are listed below. SPEED TRACKING SENSITIVITY 0 0 2 1 2 ZONE AREA SWITCHING AUTO CENTER AUTO FRONT AUTO 151 6 The Shooting Menus SET 1 SET 2 SET 3 SET 4 SET 5 TRACKING SENSITIVITY 2 3 2 0 3 Custom Focus Tracking Options Follow the steps below to adjust settings for Set 6. 1 Select AF-C CUSTOM SETTINGS > SET 6 CUSTOM. AF-C CUSTOM SETTINGS SET 6 CUSTOM TRACKING SENSITIVITY SPEED TRACKING SENSITIVITY ZONE AREA SWITCHING ADJUST AUTO SET DETAIL RESET 2 Highlight items using the focus stick (focus lever) and rotate the front command dial to change. To reset settings to their original values, press b. 3 Press DISP/BACK when settings are complete. 6 The Shooting Menus 152 AF/MF SETTING (Still Photography) STORE AF MODE BY ORIENTATION Choose whether the AF mode used when the camera is in portrait orientation is stored separately from that used when the camera is in landscape orientation. Option Description OFF The same settings are used in both orientations. FOCUS AREA ONLY The focus area for each orientation can be selected separately. ON The focus mode and focus area can be selected separately. AF POINT DISPLAY yz Choose whether individual focus frames are displayed when ZONE or WIDE/TRACKING is selected for G AF/MF SETTING > AF MODE. Options ON OFF Option ENABLE DISABLE Description Focus-area selection “wraps around” from one edge of the display to another. Focus-area selection is bounded by the borders of the display. 153 6 The Shooting Menus xF WRAP FOCUS POINT Choose whether focus-area selection is bounded by the borders of the display or “wraps around” from one edge of the display to another. NUMBER OF FOCUS POINTS Choose the number of focus points available for focus-point selection in manual focus mode or when SINGLE POINT is selected for AF MODE. Option Description Choose from 117 focus points arranged in a 9- by 13-point 117 POINTS (9 × 13) grid. Choose from 425 focus points arranged in a 17- by 25-point 425 POINTS (17 × 25) grid. PRE-AF If ON is selected, the camera will continue to adjust focus even when the shutter button is not pressed halfway. The camera adjusts focus continuously, allowing it to focus faster when the shutter button is pressed halfway. Choosing this option helps prevent missed shots. Options ON 6 The Shooting Menus O Choosing ON increases the drain on the battery. 154 OFF AF/MF SETTING (Still Photography) xF AF ILLUMINATOR If ON is selected, the AF-assist illuminator will light to assist autofocus. Options ON OFF O • The camera may be unable to focus using the AF-assist illuminator in some cases. • If the camera is unable to focus, try increasing the distance to the subject. • Avoid shining the AF-assist illuminator directly into your subject’s eyes. N Any changes made using this item also apply in movie mode (P 208). 6 The Shooting Menus 155 g FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING If the camera detects human faces, it will assign them priority over the background and adjust settings appropriately for portraits when setting focus and exposure. You can also choose whether the camera focuses on the left or right eye when face detection is on. Option 6 The Shooting Menus Description Adjust settings for Intelligent Face Detection. You can also adjust eye detection settings. • g EYE OFF: Intelligent Face Detection only. • u EYE AUTO: The camera automatically chooses which eye to focus on when a face is detected. FACE DETECTION w RIGHT EYE PRIORITY: The camera focuses preferential• ON ly on the right eye of subjects detected using Intelligent Face Detection. • v LEFT EYE PRIORITY: The camera focuses preferentially on the left eye of subjects detected using Intelligent Face Detection. OFF Intelligent Face Detection and eye priority off. O • If the subject moves as the shutter button is pressed, the face may not be in the area indicated by the green border when the picture is taken. • In some modes, the camera may set exposure for the frame as a whole rather than the portrait subject. • Enabling Intelligent Face Detection via FACE DETECTION ON automatically selects OFF for SUBJECT DETECTION SETTING. 156 AF/MF SETTING (Still Photography) N • If Y AUTO selected for AUTO MODE SETTING, the camera will au- 157 6 The Shooting Menus tomatically select the face (of if eye detection is enabled, the eye) when the mode dial is in the AUTO position. • A single face detected in or near the focus area will be marked with a white frame. • If multiple faces are detected in the focus area, the camera will select one automatically. • You can choose a different subject by tapping the display to reposition the focus area. The focus stick (focus lever) can also be used if z WIDE is selected for AF MODE. • When DIRECT AF POINT SELECTION or EDIT FOCUS AREA is chosen for D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > FOCUS LEVER SETTING > TILT o, you can also switch subjects using the focus stick (focus lever) or (during viewfinder photography) touch controls (P 25). • When the camera is focused on an eye, you can switch from one eye to the other using a function button to which RIGHT/LEFT EYE SWITCH has been assigned. • If the selected subject leaves the frame, the camera will wait a set time for its return and consequently the white frame may sometimes appear in locations where no face is seen. • Depending on shooting conditions, face selection may be suspended at the close of burst shooting. • Faces can be detected with the camera in vertical or horizontal orientation. • If the camera is unable to detect the subject’s eyes because they are hidden by hair, glasses, or other objects, the camera will instead focus on faces. • Face/eye detection options can also be accessed via shortcuts (P 308). SUBJECT DETECTION SETTING Choose whether the camera prioritizes subjects of a selected type, such as animals or vehicles, when setting focus. Option 6 Description Select one of the subject types listed below to enable subject detection. • E ANIMAL: The camera detects and tracks focus on dogs and cats. • F BIRD: The camera detects and tracks focus on birds. • G AUTOMOBILE: The camera detects and tracks focus on the body or front ends of cars, primarily those of types used SUBJECT DETECTION ON for motor sports. • H MOTORCYCLE&BIKE: The camera detects and tracks focus on the riders of motorcycles and bicycles. • I AIRPLANE: The camera detects and tracks focus on the cockpits, noses, or bodies of airplanes. • J TRAIN: The camera detects and tracks focus on the driver compartments or front ends of trains. OFF Subject detection off. The Shooting Menus O Enabling subject detection via SUBJECT DETECTION ON automatically selects OFF for g FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING. 158 AF/MF SETTING (Still Photography) N • If Y AUTO selected for AUTO MODE SETTING, the camera will 159 6 The Shooting Menus automatically select the subject when the mode dial is in the AUTO position. • A single subject of the chosen type detected in or near the focus area will be marked with a white frame. • If multiple subjects are detected in the focus area, the camera will select one automatically. • You can choose a different subject by tapping the display to reposition the focus area. The focus stick (focus lever) can also be used if z WIDE is selected for AF MODE. • When DIRECT AF POINT SELECTION or EDIT FOCUS AREA is chosen for D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > FOCUS LEVER SETTING > TILT o, you can also switch subjects using the focus stick (focus lever) or (during viewfinder photography) touch controls (P 25). • If the selected subject leaves the frame, the camera will wait a set time for its return and consequently the white frame may sometimes appear in locations where no subject of the chosen type is seen. • Depending on shooting conditions, subject detection may be suspended at the close of burst shooting. • Subjects can be detected with the camera in vertical or horizontal orientation. • Subject detection options can also be accessed via shortcuts (P 308). AF+MF If ON is selected and focus has been locked (whether by pressing the shutter button halfway or by other means), focus lock can be ended and focus adjusted manually by rotating the focus ring. Options ON OFF O • Lenses with a focus distance indicator must be set to manual focus mode (MF) before this option can be used. Selecting MF disables the focus distance indicator. • If the lens is equipped with a focus distance indicator, set the focus ring to the center, as the camera may fail to focus if the ring is set to infinity or the minimum focus distance. N • The previously-selected focus mode will be restored if no operations are performed for a set period after the focus ring is rotated. • DIGITAL SPLIT IMAGE and DIGITAL MICROPRISM focus assist options selected via MF ASSIST cannot be used. 6 The Shooting Menus AF + MF Focus Zoom Selecting ON for G AF/MF SETTING > FOCUS CHECK when SINGLE POINT is chosen for AF MODE lets you zoom in on the current focus area by rotating the focus ring. The zoom ratio can be selected using the rear command dial. 160 AF/MF SETTING (Still Photography) MF ASSIST Choose how focus is displayed in manual focus mode (P 102). Option Description Displays a black-and-white (MONOCHROME) or color (COLOR) DIGITAL SPLIT split image in the center of the frame. Frame the subject in the IMAGE split-image area and rotate the focus ring until the four parts of the split image are correctly aligned. A grid pattern that emphasizes blur is displayed when the subject DIGITAL is out of focus, disappearing to be replaced by a sharp image when MICROPRISM the subject is in focus. FOCUS PEAK The camera heightens high-contrast outlines. Choose a color and HIGHLIGHT peaking level. OFF Focus is displayed normally (MF assist cannot be used). FOCUS CHECK If ON is selected, the display will automatically zoom in on the selected focus area when the focus ring is rotated in manual focus mode. 6 Options OFF N • Press the focus stick (focus lever) to cancel focus zoom. • The zoom position is centered on the current focus area and changes when the focus area is changed. 161 The Shooting Menus ON INTERLOCK SPOT AE & FOCUS AREA Choose ON to meter the current focus frame when SPOT or MULTI metering is selected. Options ON OFF xF INSTANT AF SETTING Chooses how the camera focuses when a button to which focus lock or AF-ON is assigned is pressed with MANUAL FOCUS selected for FOCUS MODE. Option AF-S AF-C Description The camera focuses when the button is pressed. The camera focuses while the button is pressed. N Any changes made using this item also apply in movie mode (P 210). 6 xF DEPTH-OF-FIELD SCALE Choose the basis for the depth-of-field scale. The Shooting Menus Option Description Provides a precision reference for use when assessing depth of field PIXEL BASIS for pictures that will be viewed at high resolutions on computers or other electronic displays. Provides a practical reference for use when assessing depth of field FILM FORMAT for pictures that will be viewed at lower resolutions, for example BASIS as prints. N Any changes made using this item also apply in movie mode (P 210). 162 AF/MF SETTING (Still Photography) RELEASE/FOCUS PRIORITY Choose how the camera focuses when the shutter button is pressed all the way down with SINGLE AF or CONTINUOUS AF selected for FOCUS MODE. Option RELEASE FOCUS Description Shutter response is prioritized over focus. Pictures can be taken when the camera is not in focus. Focus is prioritized over shutter response. Pictures can be only taken when the camera is in focus. O Regardless of the option selected, pictures can still be taken when the camera is not in focus if ON is selected for AF+MF. 6 The Shooting Menus 163 xF AF RANGE LIMITER Limit the range of available focus distances for increased focus speed. Option OFF CUSTOM PRESET1 PRESET2 Description Focus limiter disabled. Limit focus to a range of distances defined by a minimum and maximum. • OK: Limit focus to the selected range. • SET: Choose two objects and limit focus to the distance between them. Limit focus to a preset range. O • Choosing a focus range that includes distances shorter than the minimum focus distance of the lens disables the focus limiter. • The values listed and displayed for the focus limiter may differ from the actual focus distance. • Focus range can be set independently on lenses equipped with focus range selectors. Be sure that the option selected in the camera menus overlaps with that chosen with the lens. 6 The Shooting Menus N • The following additional operations can be performed when CUSTOM is selected: - You can tap objects in the touch screen display to choose the focus - range. Instead of tapping an object in the display, you set the maximum focus distance to infinity by rotating the focus ring. • Any changes made using this item also apply in movie mode (P 210). 164 AF/MF SETTING (Still Photography) TOUCH SCREEN MODE Choose the shooting operations performed using touch controls. Mode Description Tap your subject in the display to focus and release the shutter. TOUCH In burst mode, pictures will be taken while you keep your finger SHOOTING on the display. • In focus mode l (SINGLE AF), the camera focuses when you AF AF OFF AREA tap your subject in the display. Focus locks at the current distance until you tap the AF OFF icon. • In focus mode k (CONTINUOUS AF), the camera initiates focus when you tap your subject display. The camera will continue to adjust focus for changes in the distance to the subject until you tap the AF OFF icon. • In manual focus mode p (MANUAL FOCUS), you can tap the display to focus on the selected subject using autofocus. Tap to select a point for focus or zoom. The focus frame will move to the selected point. 6 Touch screen mode off. N • The behavior of the touch screen varies with the AF mode. • To disable touch controls and hide the touch screen mode indicator, select OFF for D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > TOUCH SCREEN SETTING > x TOUCH SCREEN SETTING. 165 The Shooting Menus OFF AF/MF SETTING (Still Photography) Touch Controls for Focus Zoom Different touch controls are used during focus zoom (focus check enabled). Central Area Tapping the center of the display performs the operations below. Mode TOUCH SHOOTING AF AREA OFF 6 Operation performed SINGLE AF/MANUAL FOCUS: Take a picture SINGLE AF: AF MANUAL FOCUS: Instant AF SINGLE AF: AF MANUAL FOCUS: Instant AF SINGLE AF/MANUAL FOCUS: OFF The Shooting Menus Other Areas Tapping other areas simply scrolls the display, whether during still photography or movie recording and regardless of the option selected for touch screen mode. 166 SHOOTING SETTING (Still Photography) Adjust shooting options for still photography. To display shooting settings, press MENU/OK in the photo shooting display and select the A (SHOOTING SETTING) tab. N The options available vary with the shooting mode selected. SHOOTING SETTING AUTO MODE SETTING FILTER SETTING SPORTS FINDER MODE PRE-SHOT SELF-TIMER SAVE SELF-TIMER SETTING SELF-TIMER LAMP AE BKT SETTING EXIT AUTO MODE SETTING Choose the scene selected when the mode dial is rotated to AUTO (P 68). FILTER SETTING Choose the filter used when the mode dial is rotated to FILTER (P 81). 6 The Shooting Menus 167 SPORTS FINDER MODE Take pictures using the crop in the center of the display. Choose this option for pictures of athletes, birds, and other moving subjects. Option ON OFF Description Pictures are taken using a 1.29× crop, reducing the picture angle by an amount equivalent to increasing lens focal length by 1.29×; the crop is shown by a frame in the display. The 1.29× crop is disabled. N • The H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING > IMAGE SIZE item in the shooting menu is fixed at P. • The sports finder is not available in modes that offer an electronic shutter. 6 The Shooting Menus 168 SHOOTING SETTING (Still Photography) PRE-SHOT sJ To reduce the lag between your pressing the shutter button all the way down and the resulting picture being recorded to the memory card, the camera starts shooting with the electronic shutter when the shutter button is pressed halfway and saves a series shots starting just before the shutter button is pressed the rest of the way down. Options ON OFF N • Pre-shot photography is available only when s ELECTRONIC SHUTTER is selected in CH (high speed burst) drive mode (P 172). • Flash photography is disabled. SELF-TIMER Choose a shutter release delay. Option If an option other than OFF is selected, the timer will start when the shutter button is pressed all the way down. The display shows the number of seconds remaining until the shutter is released. To stop the timer before the picture is taken, press DISP/BACK. 9 O • Stand behind the camera when using the shutter button. Standing in front of the lens can interfere with focus and exposure. • The self-timer turns off automatically when the camera is turned off. 169 6 The Shooting Menus Description The shutter is released two seconds after the shutter button is pressed. Use to reduce blur caused by the camera moving when the shutter R 2 SEC button is pressed. The self-timer lamp blinks as the timer counts down. The shutter is released ten seconds after the shutter button is pressed. S 10 SEC Use for photographs in which you wish to appear yourself. The self-timer lamp blinks immediately before the picture is taken. OFF Self-timer off. SAVE SELF-TIMER SETTING If ON is selected, the setting chosen for SELF-TIMER will remain in effect after the camera is turned off. Options ON OFF SELF-TIMER LAMP If ON is selected, the self-timer lamp will light during self-timer photography. Select OFF when shooting night scenes or in other situations in which you would prefer that the lamp remain unlit. Options ON OFF AE BKT SETTING Adjust exposure bracketing settings. Option 6 The Shooting Menus Description Choose the number of shots in the bracketing sequence and the amount exposure is varied with each shot. FRAMES: Choose the number of shots in the bracketing • FRAMES/STEP SETTING sequence. • STEP: Choose the amount exposure is varied with each shot. • 1 FRAME: The shots in the bracketing sequence are taken one at a time. 1 FRAME/CONTINUOUS • CONTINUOUS: The shots in the bracketing sequence are taken in a single burst. SEQUENCE SETTING Choose the order in which the shots are taken. 170 SHOOTING SETTING (Still Photography) FILM SIMULATION BKT Choose the three film simulation types used for film simulation bracketing (P 132). FOCUS BKT SETTING Choose from AUTO and MANUAL focus bracketing modes (P 113). PHOTOMETRY Choose how the camera meters exposure (P 106). 6 The Shooting Menus 171 SHUTTER TYPE Choose the shutter type. Choose the electronic shutter to mute the shutter sound. Option t MECHANICAL SHUTTER s ELECTRONIC SHUTTER u MECHANICAL + ELECTRONIC Description Take pictures with the mechanical shutter. Take pictures with the electronic shutter. The camera chooses the mechanical or electronic shutter according to shooting conditions. O • When using the electronic shutter, note the following: - Distortion may be visible in shots of moving subjects. - Distortion may also be visible in hand-held shots taken at high 6 shutter speeds; use of a tripod is recommended. Banding and fog may occur in shots taken under fluorescent lights or other flickering or erratic illumination. When taking pictures with the shutter muted (P 277), respect your subjects’ image rights and right to privacy. The Shooting Menus N The following restrictions apply when the electronic shutter is used: • Sensitivity is restricted to values of ISO 160–12800 • Long exposure noise reduction has no effect • The flash cannot be used 172 SHOOTING SETTING (Still Photography) INTERVAL TIMER SHOOTING Configure the camera to take photos automatically at a preset interval. 1 2 Highlight INTERVAL TIMER SHOOTING in the A (SHOOTING SETTING) tab and press MENU/OK. INTERVAL TIMER SHOOTING Highlight WITH IN-CAMERA TIMER and press MENU/OK. Interval-timer settings will be displayed. INTERVAL/NUMBER OF TIMES WITH IN-CAMERA TIMER WITH EXTERNAL TIMER INTERVAL NUMBER OF TIMES END CANCEL you are using a remote release with its own timer, select WITH N IfEXTERNAL TIMER. You will be returned to the shooting display, where you can start interval-timer photography using the remote release. Use the focus stick (focus lever) to choose the interval and number of shots. Press MENU/OK to proceed. START WAITING TIME LATER ESTIMATED START TIME START 4 PM CANCEL Use the focus stick to choose the starting time and then press MENU/OK. Shooting will start automatically. CANCEL O Interval timer photography cannot be used at a shutter speed of “bulb” or with multiple exposure photography. In burst mode, only one picture will be taken each time the shutter is released. 173 The Shooting Menus 3 6 N • Use of a tripod is recommended. • We recommend using an AC-5VJ AC power adapter. • To view the pictures taken so far, press the a button during inter- val-timer photography. To return to the shooting display, press the a button again or wait until the start of the next interval. • The display turns off between shots and lights a few seconds before the next shot is taken. • The display can be activated at any time by pressing the shutter button. • The indicator lamp blinks green whenever the displays are off during interval-timer photography. • To continue shooting until the number of shots taken equals the number of exposures remaining at the time interval-timer photography started, set the number of shots to ∞. INTERVAL TIMER SHOOTING EXPOSURE SMOOTHING Select ON to automatically adjust exposure during interval-timer photography to prevent it changing dramatically between shots. Options ON 6 OFF The Shooting Menus O • Large changes in subject brightness may make exposure appear er- ratic. We recommend that you choose shorter values for INTERVAL TIMER SHOOTING > INTERVAL with subjects that brighten or dim dramatically during shooting. • In manual mode (mode M), exposure smoothing is only available if an AUTO option is selected for ISO. 174 SHOOTING SETTING (Still Photography) INTERVAL PRIORITY MODE If ON is selected, the camera will adjust shutter speed during interval-timer photography to ensure that exposures are not longer than the interval between photographs. Options ON OFF O This option takes effect only when the camera selects the shutter speed automatically. FLICKER REDUCTION Reduce flicker in pictures and the display when shooting under fluorescent lighting and other similar light sources. Option ALL FRAMES FIRST FRAME O • Flicker reduction increases the time needed to record pictures. • OFF is selected for FLICKER REDUCTION when the electronic shutter is used. • Flicker reduction is not available during movie recording. 175 6 The Shooting Menus OFF Description Flicker reduction is applied to all frames continuous shooting frame rate reduces. Flicker measurement is taken prior to the first frame only and the same reduction amount is applied to all subsequent frames that flicker may occur. Flicker reduction disabled. FLICKERLESS S.S. SETTING Select ON to allow shutter speed to be fine-tuned to reduce flicker caused by LED lighting and the like. Options ON OFF N This option takes effect only in modes S and M. IS MODE Reduce blur caused by camera shake or subject motion. 6 The Shooting Menus Option Description L CONTINUOUS Image stabilization on. If + MOTION is selected, the camera + MOTION will adjust shutter speed to reduce motion blur when movl CONTINUOUS ing objects are detected. M SHOOTING As above, except that image stabilization is performed only when the shutter button is pressed halfway (focus mode + MOTION k only) or the shutter is released. If + MOTION is selected, m SHOOTING ONLY the camera will adjust shutter speed to reduce motion blur when moving objects are detected. Image stabilization off. Choose this option when using a OFF tripod. N • + MOTION has no effect when sensitivity is set to a fixed value, and may also be unavailable at some other combinations of settings. The effect may vary with lighting conditions and the speed at which the object is moving. • The setting selected with the lens image stabilization switch, if any, takes priority over the setting chosen with IS MODE. • Note that vibration or camera sounds may be noticeable as image stabilization takes effect. 176 SHOOTING SETTING (Still Photography) ISO Adjust the camera’s sensitivity to light (P 104). xF COOLING FAN SETTING Adjust settings for optional cooling fans (P 347). Option AUTO1 AUTO2 LOW HIGH OFF Description The fan turns on automatically as required when camera temperature rises and runs at slow speed. The fan turns on automatically as required when camera temperature rises and runs at high speed. The increased fan noise may be audible in movies. Run the fan continuously at low speed. Run the fan continuously at high speed. The increased fan noise may be audible in movies. Turn the fan off. N For more information, visit: https://app.fujifilm-dsc.com/ 177 6 The Shooting Menus xF WIRELESS COMMUNICATION Connect to smartphones running the latest version of apps. The smartphone can then be used to: • Control the camera and take pictures remotely • Receive pictures uploaded from the camera • Browse the pictures on the camera and download selected pictures • Upload location data to the camera FLASH SETTING (Still Photography) Adjust flash-related settings for still photography. To display flash settings, press MENU/OK in the photo shooting display and select the F (FLASH SETTING) tab. FLASH SETTING FLASH FUNCTION SETTING RED EYE REMOVAL TTL-LOCK MODE LED LIGHT SETTING COMMANDER SETTING CH SETTING EXIT FLASH FUNCTION SETTING Choose a flash control mode, flash mode, or sync mode or adjust the flash level. The options available vary with the flash. MODE Built-In Flash ADJUST N For END more information on flash settings, see “External Flash Units” (P 337) in “Peripherals and Optional Accessories”. 6 The Shooting Menus RED EYE REMOVAL Remove red-eye effects caused by the flash. Option FLASH OFF Description Flash red-eye reduction only. Flash red-eye reduction and digital red-eye removal off. N Flash red-eye reduction can be used in TTL flash control mode. 178 FLASH SETTING (Still Photography) TTL-LOCK MODE Instead of adjusting flash level with each shot, TTL flash control can be locked for consistent results across a series of photographs. Option Description Flash output is locked at the value metered for the most LOCK WITH LAST FLASH recent photo. LOCK WITH METERING The camera emits a series of pre-flashes and locks flash FLASH output at the metered value. N • To use TTL lock, assign TTL-LOCK to a camera control and then use the control to enable or disable TTL lock (P 317). • Flash compensation can be adjusted while TTL lock is in effect. • Selecting LOCK WITH LAST FLASH displays an error message if no previously metered value exists. LED LIGHT SETTING Choose whether to use the flash unit’s LED video light (if available) as a catchlight or AF-assist illuminator when taking photos. Role of LED video light in still photography Catchlight AF-assist illuminator AF-assist illuminator and catchlight None N In some cases, this option can also be accessed via the FLASH FUNCTION SETTING menu. 179 The Shooting Menus Option CATCHLIGHT AF ASSIST AF ASSIST+CATCHLIGHT OFF 6 FLASH SETTING (Still Photography) COMMANDER SETTING Choose groups when using the camera flash unit as a commander for Fujifilm optical wireless remote flash control. This option is available when the camera is used with clip-on flash units that support Fujifilm optical wireless flash control. Options Gr A Gr B Gr C OFF N In some cases, this option can also be accessed via the FLASH FUNCTION SETTING menu. CH SETTING Choose the channel used for communication between the commander and remote flash units. Separate channels can be used for different flash systems or to prevent interference when multiple systems are operating in close proximity. Options 6 CH1 The Shooting Menus 180 CH2 CH3 CH4 MOVIE SETTING (Still Photography) Adjust options for movies shot during still photography using the t (movie recording) button. To display movie settings, press MENU/OK in the photo shooting display and select the B (MOVIE SETTING) tab. MOVIE SETTING MOVIE MODE HIGH SPEED REC MEDIA REC SETTING F IS MODE F IS MODE BOOST AUDIO SETTING MIC/REMOTE RELEASE FREC FRAME INDICATOR EXIT N The options available vary with the shooting mode selected. MOVIE MODE This item is also found in the movie menus (P 187). Changes here also apply to the item in the movie menus. HIGH SPEED REC This item is also found in the movie menus (P 189). Changes here also apply to the item in the movie menus. 181 The Shooting Menus MEDIA REC SETTING This item is also found in the movie menus (P 190). Changes here also apply to the item in the movie menus. 6 F IS MODE This item is also found in the movie menus (P 197). Changes here also apply to the item in the movie menus. F IS MODE BOOST This item is also found in the movie menus (P 197). Changes here also apply to the item in the movie menus. AUDIO SETTING Adjust audio-related settings for movie recording. INTERNAL MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT Adjust the recording level for the built-in microphone. Option AUTO MANUAL OFF 6 Description The camera adjusts the recording level automatically. Adjust the recording level manually. Choose from 25 recording levels. Turn the built-in microphone off. The Shooting Menus EXTERNAL MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT Adjust the recording level for external microphones. Option AUTO MANUAL OFF 182 Description The camera adjusts the recording level automatically. Adjust the recording level manually. Choose from 25 recording levels. Disable recording using external microphones. MOVIE SETTING (Still Photography) MIC JACK SETTING Specify the type of hardware connected via the microphone/remote release connector. Option MIC LINE Description Choose this option for direct connection to an external microphone. Choose this option for external audio devices connected via line output. MIC LEVEL LIMITER Reduces distortion caused by input that exceeds the limits of the microphone’s audio circuits. Options ON OFF WIND FILTER Choose whether to enable wind noise reduction during movie recording. ON OFF LOW CUT FILTER Choose whether to enable the low-cut filter, reducing low-frequency noise during movie recording. Options ON OFF HEADPHONES VOLUME Adjust the headphone volume. Option 0 1—10 Description Mute output to the headphones. Choose a volume of from 1 to 10. 183 6 The Shooting Menus Options XLR MIC ADAPTER SETTING Adjust microphone input channel settings and the like for use with XLR microphone adapters. Option 6 The Shooting Menus Description Record four-channel (quadraphonic) sound with the help of the camera’s built-in microphone, or two-channel (stereo) sound using only a microphone connected via the XLR microphone adapter. MIC INPUT CHANNEL • 4ch XLR+CAMERA: Record four-channel sound with the help of the camera’s built-in microphone. • 2ch XLR ONLY: Record two-channel sound using only an external microphone connected via the XLR microphone adapter. Choose the source of sound output to headphones or other audio monitors during movie recording. XLR: Monitor sound from external microphones con• 4ch AUDIO MONITORING nected via the XLR microphone adapter. • CAMERA: Monitor sound from camera’s built-in microphone. Choose source of audio output to the HDMI connector. • XLR: Audio from external microphones connected via HDMI 4ch AUDIO the XLR microphone adapter is output to the HDMI conOUTPUT nector. • CAMERA: Audio from camera’s built-in microphone is output to the HDMI connector. N • If an external microphone is connected to the camera’s microphone jack, audio will be recorded not via the camera’s built-in microphone but via the external microphone instead. • Four-channel recording is available only when MOV is selected for movie file format. 184 MOVIE SETTING (Still Photography) MIC/REMOTE RELEASE This item is also found in the movie menus (P 215). Changes here also apply to the item in the movie menus. F REC FRAME INDICATOR This item is also found in the movie menus (P 199). Changes here also apply to the item in the movie menus. 6 The Shooting Menus 185 MOVIE SETTING (Movie Recording) Adjust movie-recording options. To display options for movie recording, press MENU/OK in the movie shooting display and select the B (MOVIE SETTING) tab. MOVIE SETTING MOVIE SETTING LIST SHOOTING MODE MOVIE MODE BACKGROUND DEFOCUS MODE HIGH SPEED REC FSELF-TIMER MEDIA REC SETTING HDMI OUTPUT SETTING EXIT MOVIE SETTING LIST View current movie recording settings. N These options can also be viewed by pressing the DISP/BACK button while the movie quick menu is displayed. SHOOTING MODE Choose a shooting mode for movies. Options 6 PROGRAM AE The Shooting Menus 186 SHUTTER PRIORITY AE APERTURE PRIORITY AE MANUAL MOVIE SETTING (Movie Recording) MOVIE MODE Before shooting movies, choose the frame rate and the frame size and aspect ratio. MOVIE MODE 1920 × 1080 1h18m31s CANNOT USE S.S. SLOWER THAN FRAMERATE END CANCEL 1 In the shooting menu, select B MOVIE SETTING, then highlight MOVIE MODE and press MENU/OK. 2 Press the focus stick (focus lever) up or down to highlight the desired frame size and aspect ratio (A) and press the stick right. • Choose J3 : 2 for 6.2 K movies with an aspect ratio of 3 : 2. • Choose V16 : 9 or d17 : 9 for 4K movies with aspect ratios of 16 or 17 to 9. • Choose W16 : 9 or W17 : 9 for Full HD movies with aspect ratios of 16 or 17 to 9. S16 : 9 and S17 : 9 permit longer movies than do W16 : 9 and W17 : 9. Highlight a frame rate (B) and press MENU/OK. 23.98P 24P 25P Options 29.97P 50P 59.94P N The choice of frame rates varies with the movie mode. 187 The Shooting Menus 3 6 BACKGROUND DEFOCUS MODE If ON is selected, the camera will automatically set aperture to the lowest f-stop (maximum aperture) regardless of the setting selected by the user. This option takes effect only when the mode dial is in the Vlog position. Options ON N We OFF recommend that you select PROGRAM AE or APERTURE PRIORITY AE for SHOOTING MODE to ensure consistent exposure. 6 The Shooting Menus 188 MOVIE SETTING (Movie Recording) HIGH SPEED REC Record high-frame-rate movies. High-frame-rate movies can be played back in slow motion, giving you time to view fast-moving subjects or details too fleeting for the naked eye. Select ON to choose the recording and playback rates separately. N Choose ON HDMI ONLY to record footage only to external recorders connected via HDMI. Note that this option does not support playback frame-rate selection. Frame Size Options W16 : 9 W17 : 9 Recording Options 100P 120P 200P 240P 6 Playback 24P 25P Options 29.97P 50P 59.94P N • High-speed movies are recorded with no sound. • The footage recorded to the memory card is compressed with the goal of maintaining the selected bit rate. • The options available for playback rate vary with the option selected for rate of recording. 189 The Shooting Menus 23.98P F SELF-TIMER Choose the delay between the shutter button being pressed all the way down and the start of recording. • The display shows the number of seconds remaining before recording begins. • To stop the timer before recording begins, press DISP/BACK. Options 3 SEC 5 SEC 10 SEC OFF MEDIA REC SETTING Choose movie file settings, including destination, file type, compression, and bit rate. 6 MEDIA REC SETTING Choose movie file settings, including destination, file type, and compression. The Shooting Menus Destination Choose save options and save and output destinations for movies. Option Z U 190 Description Movies are saved solely to the memory card. Movies are recorded only to devices connected via HDMI. MOVIE SETTING (Movie Recording) File Type and Compression Choose the movie file type and compression. Option H.264 ALL-I 420 MOV H.264 LongGOP 420 MOV H.264 LongGOP 420 MP4 H.265 ALL-I 420 MOV H.265 LongGOP 420 MOV H.265 ALL-I 422 MOV N • 4 : 2 : 2 chroma sub-sampling is used for footage output to external devices connected via HDMI; H.264 footage is output at a bit depth of 8 bits and footage in other formats at a depth of 10 bits. • All-I compresses each frame separately. Files are larger, but the fact that the data for each frame are saved separately makes this a good choice for footage that will be further processed. • Long GOP balances good image quality with high compression. Files are smaller, making it a good choice for longer movies. • The options available for file type and compression vary with the options selected for MOVIE MODE, HIGH SPEED REC, and F-Log/HLG RECORDING. 191 6 The Shooting Menus H.265 LongGOP 422 MOV Description A highly-portable compressed format. Footage is recorded at a depth of 8 bits using All-I interframe compression and 4 : 2 : 0 chroma sub-sampling. A highly-portable compressed format. Footage is recorded at a depth of 8 bits using Long GOP interframe compression and 4 : 2 : 0 chroma sub-sampling. A format suitable for movies that will be uploaded to the web. A format with a higher compression ratio than H.264. Footage is recorded at a depth of 10 bits using All-I interframe compression and 4 : 2 : 0 chroma sub-sampling. A format with a higher compression ratio than H.264. Footage is recorded at a depth of 10 bits using Long GOP interframe compression and 4 : 2 : 0 chroma sub-sampling. A format with a higher compression ratio than H.264. Footage is recorded at a depth of 10 bits using All-I interframe compression and 4 : 2 : 2 chroma sub-sampling. A format with a higher compression ratio than H.264. Footage is recorded at a depth of 10 bits using Long GOP interframe compression and 4 : 2 : 2 chroma sub-sampling. Bit Rate Choose the movie bit rate. Options 50Mbps 100Mbps 200Mbps 360Mbps N The options available for bit rate vary with the settings chosen for high- speed movie recording and compression. The actual bit rate may be slower than the selected value depending on the subject. 6 The Shooting Menus 192 MOVIE SETTING (Movie Recording) HDMI OUTPUT SETTING Adjust settings for use when the shooting display is output to an HDMI device. HDMI OUTPUT INFO DISPLAY If ON is selected, HDMI devices to which the camera is connected will mirror the information in the camera display. Options ON OFF HDMI REC CONTROL Choose whether the camera sends movie start and stop signals to the HDMI device when the shutter button is pressed to start and stop movie recording. Options ON OFF Option Description RAW OUTPUT Output RAW footage to ATOMOS video recorders. SETTING ATOMOS RAW OUTPUT Output RAW footage to Blackmagic Design video recorders. SETTING Blackmagic OFF Do not output RAW footage to external recorders. 193 6 The Shooting Menus RAW OUTPUT SETTING Choose whether to output RAW footage to external recorders connected via HDMI. N • RAW footage output to external devices is not saved to the memory cards inserted in the camera. • In-camera image enhancements are not applied to the RAW output. • ISO sensitivity is restricted to values between ISO 1000 and ISO 12800. • Footage output to external devices is generated from the original RAW data and its quality, which varies with device specifications, may not be equal to that achieved as the end result of post-production or the like. • Focus zoom is not available when RAW is selected for HDMI output. • RAW footage output via HDMI to incompatible devices will not display correctly but will instead will display as a mosaic. • RAW output is disabled in some movie and high-speed recording modes. FIX MOVIE CROP MAGNIFICATION Fix the movie crop ratio at 1.29∶1. This makes it easier to match crops after changing movie settings. Options ON 6 The Shooting Menus 194 OFF MOVIE SETTING (Movie Recording) F-Log/HLG RECORDING Choose the destination for F‐Log and HLG (Hybrid Log-Gamma) movies shot while the camera is connected to an HDMI device. Option t u v w Description The footage is processed using film simulation and both saved to the memory card and output to the HDMI device. The footage is recorded to the memory card and output to the HDMI device in F-Log format. The footage is recorded to the memory card and output to the HDMI device in F-Log2 format. The footage is recorded to the memory card and output to the HDMI device in HLG format. N • F-Log and FLog2 offer gentle gamma curves with wide gamuts suit- 195 6 The Shooting Menus able for further processing post-production. Sensitivity is restricted to values between ISO 640 and ISO 12800 (F-Log) or between ISO 1250 and ISO 12800 (FLog2). • The HLG (Hybrid Log-Gamma) recording format conforms to the international ITU-R BT2100 standard. When viewed on HLG-compatible displays, high-quality HLG footage faithfully captures high-contrast scenes and vivid colors. Sensitivity is restricted to values between ISO 1000 and ISO 12800. • Film simulation (P) footage is recorded using the option selected for H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING > F FILM SIMULATION in the shooting menu. DATA LEVEL SETTING Choose a signal range for movie recording. Option VIDEO RANGE FULL RANGE Description The signal range for 8-bit movies is limited to 16–235 and that for 10-bit movies to 64–940. The signal ranges for 8-bit and 10-bit movies are respectively 0–255 and 0–1023. F PHOTOMETRY Options are the same as those for still photography, but settings must be adjusted separately (P 106). F FLICKERLESS S.S. SETTING Options are the same as those for still photography, but settings must be adjusted separately (P 176). Options ON 6 The Shooting Menus 196 OFF MOVIE SETTING (Movie Recording) F IS MODE Choose the image stabilization mode. Option IBIS/OIS IBIS/OIS + DIS OFF Description Enable in-body (IBIS) and optical (OIS) image stabilization. IBIS is used with lenses that do not support OIS. Enable in-body (IBIS), optical (OIS), and digital (DIS) image stabilization. The crop is adjusted according to the option selected for MOVIE MODE. This setting can compensate for more severe camera shake. Image stabilization off ; x appears in the display. N • The setting selected with the lens image stabilization switch, if any, takes priority over the setting chosen with the IS mode. • Note that vibration or camera sounds may be noticeable as image stabilization takes effect. F IS MODE BOOST Choose the image stabilization level. Description Suitable for shots with no panning. Suitable for shots with panning. 6 N Assigning IS MODE BOOST to a function button allows the image stabilization level to be changed while recording is in progress (P 317). F ISO Adjust the camera’s sensitivity to light. Option H (25600) 160–12800 AUTO Description Choose for special situations. Note that dynamic range may be reduced and that pictures may be mottled. Adjust sensitivity manually. Selected value is shown in display. Sensitivity is automatically adjusted in response to shooting conditions. 197 The Shooting Menus Option ON OFF ZEBRA SETTING Highlights that may be overexposed are shown by zebra stripes in the movie mode display. Option ZEBRA RIGHT ZEBRA LEFT OFF Description Right-slanting stripes. Left-slanting stripes. Stripes off. ZEBRA LEVEL Choose the brightness threshold for the zebra stripe display. 50 6 The Shooting Menus 198 55 60 65 70 Options 75 80 85 90 95 100 MOVIE SETTING (Movie Recording) MOVIE OPTIMIZED CONTROL oL Select ON to allow movie settings to be adjusted using only the command dials and touch-screen controls. You may find this helpful in preventing the sounds of camera controls being recorded with movies (P 27). Options ON OFF F REC FRAME INDICATOR If ON is selected, the borders of the display will turn red during movie recording. Options ON OFF N The borders are displayed in green during high-speed movie recording. 6 The Shooting Menus 199 TALLY LIGHT Choose the lamp (indicator or AF-assist) that lights during movie recording and whether the lamp blinks or remains steady. Indicator lamp 6 The Shooting Menus Option FRONT OFF REAR z FRONT OFF REAR y FRONT z REAR z FRONT z REAR OFF FRONT y REAR y FRONT y REAR OFF FRONT OFF REAR OFF 200 AF-assist illuminator Description The indicator lamp lights during movie recording. The indicator lamp blinks during movie recording. The indicator and AF-assist lamps light during movie recording. The AF-assist lamp lights during movie recording. The indicator and AF-assist lamps blink during movie recording. The AF-assist lamp blinks during movie recording. The indicator and AF-assist lamps remain off during movie recording. MOVIE SETTING (Movie Recording) xF COOLING FAN SETTING This item is also found in the photo menus (P 177). F EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING Options are the same as those for still photography, but settings must be adjusted separately (P 144). F AUTO UPDATE CUSTOM SETTING Options are the same as those for still photography, but settings must be adjusted separately (P 144). xF CUSTOM MODE SETTING Choose whether the current custom settings bank is to be used for still photography or movie recording (P 82). xF WIRELESS COMMUNICATION This item is also found in the photo menus (P 177). 6 The Shooting Menus 201 IMAGE QUALITY SETTING (Movie Recording) Adjust image quality settings for movies. To display image quality settings, press MENU/OK in the movie shooting display and select the H (IMAGE QUALITY SETTING) tab. IMAGE QUALITY SETTING FFILM SIMULATION FMONOCHROMATIC COLOR FWHITE BALANCE FDYNAMIC RANGE FTONE CURVE FCOLOR FSHARPNESS FHIGH ISO NR EXIT N The options available vary with the shooting mode selected. F FILM SIMULATION Options are the same as those for still photography, but settings must be adjusted separately (P 132). F MONOCHROMATIC COLOR Options are the same as those for still photography, but settings must be adjusted separately (P 134). 6 The Shooting Menus 202 IMAGE QUALITY SETTING (Movie Recording) F WHITE BALANCE Options are the same as those for still photography, but settings must be adjusted separately (P 136). F DYNAMIC RANGE Choose a dynamic range for movie recording. Option V100% W200% X400% Description See “DYNAMIC RANGE” (P 140). N • AUTO (automatic dynamic range control) is not available during movie recording. • W200% is available at sensitivities of from ISO 320 to ISO 12800, X400% at sensitivities of from ISO 640 to 12800. item is available when t is selected for B MOVIE SETTING > F-Log/HLG RECORDING. • This F COLOR Options are the same as those for still photography, but settings must be adjusted separately (P 141). 203 6 The Shooting Menus F TONE CURVE Options are the same as those for still photography, but settings must be adjusted separately (P 141). F SHARPNESS Options are the same as those for still photography, but settings must be adjusted separately (P 141). F HIGH ISO NR Options are the same as those for still photography, but settings must be adjusted separately (P 142). INTERFRAME NR Select AUTO to automatically adjust interframe noise reduction according to shooting conditions. Options AUTO OFF N “Ghosting” may occur with moving subjects or if the camera is moved during shooting. 6 The Shooting Menus 204 IMAGE QUALITY SETTING (Movie Recording) F PERIPHERAL LIGHT CORRECTION Select ON to enable peripheral illumination correction during movie recording. Options ON OFF N • If ON is selected when a lens that does not transmit data to the camera is attached, peripheral illumination will be adjusted according to the option selected for H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING > xF MOUNT ADAPTER SETTING > PERIPHERAL ILLUMINATION CORRECTION in the shooting menu (P 147). • Select OFF if you notice banding in movies recorded using this option. xF MOUNT ADAPTOR SETTING This item is also found in the photo menus (P 145). Changes to one apply to the other. 6 The Shooting Menus 205 AF/MF SETTING (Movie Recording) Adjust focus settings for movies. To display AF/MF settings, press MENU/OK in the movie shooting display and select the G (AF/MF SETTING) tab. AF/MF SETTING FFOCUS AREA F FOCUS MODE F AF MODE FAF-C CUSTOM SETTING xFWRAP FOCUS POINT xFAF ILLUMINATOR PRODUCT PRIORITY MODE Fg FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING EXIT N The options available vary with the shooting mode selected. F FOCUS AREA Choose the focus area for autofocus, manual focus, and focus zoom (P 96). O The focus area cannot be resized while recording is in progress. F FOCUS MODE Choose the focus mode for movie recording. 6 The Shooting Menus Option Description p MANUAL FOCUS Focus manually. k CONTINUOUS AF The camera focuses using AF-C. The camera focuses using AF-S. l SINGLE AF F AF MODE Choose how the camera selects the focus point for movie recording. Option MULTI AREA 206 Description The camera selects the focus area automatically. The camera focuses on the subject in the selected focus area. AF/MF SETTING (Movie Recording) F AF-C CUSTOM SETTING Select focus-tracking options when recording movies with CONTINUOUS AF selected for F FOCUS MODE. TRACKING SENSITIVITY Choose how long the camera waits to switch focus when an object enters the focus area behind or in front of the current subject. See “TRACKING SENSITIVITY” (P 150). 0 1 Options 2 3 4 O • The higher the value, the longer it takes the camera to refocus when you attempt to switch subjects. • The lower the value, the more likely the camera is to switch focus from your subject to other objects in the focus area. AF SPEED Adjust the autofocus response speed. Choose higher values for faster response times, lower values for slower response times. −4 −3 −2 +2 +3 +4 +5 xF WRAP FOCUS POINT This item is also found in the photo menus (P 153). Changes to one apply to the other. 207 6 The Shooting Menus −5 Options −1 0 +1 xF AF ILLUMINATOR This item is also found in the photo menus (P 155). Changes to one apply to the other. PRODUCT PRIORITY MODE Selecting ON automatically optimizes settings for filming product reviews and the like. This option takes effect only when the mode dial is in the Vlog position. Options ON OFF N Select OFF to adjust settings manually. Fg FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING Enable or disable Intelligent Face Detection when recording movies. 6 Option FACE DETECTION ON OFF Description See “g FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING” (P 156). Intelligent Face Detection and eye priority off. The Shooting Menus O If SINGLE AF is chosen for FOCUS MODE when FACE DETECTION ON is selected for G AF/MF SETTING > Fg FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING, the camera will automatically switch to CONTINUOUS AF. Selecting MANUAL FOCUS when FACE DETECTION ON is selected for Fg FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING disables Intelligent Face Detection. 208 AF/MF SETTING (Movie Recording) F SUBJECT DETECTION SETTING Options are the same as those for still photography, but settings must be adjusted separately (P 158). O The camera automatically switches to continuous AF when SUBJECT DETECTION ON is selected for G AF/MF SETTING > F SUBJECT DETECTION SETTING, even if SINGLE AF is selected for FOCUS MODE. Subject detection is not available during manual focus, even when SUBJECT DETECTION ON is selected for F SUBJECT DETECTION SETTING. F AF+MF Select ON to enable manual focus in SINGLE AF and CONTINUOUS AF modes. Manual focus can be suspended by pressing the AFON button. Options ON OFF Option Description The camera heightens high-contrast outlines. Choose a FOCUS PEAK HIGHLIGHT color and peaking level. A needle indicates whether focus is in front of or behind FOCUS METER the subject. FOCUS METER + PEAK Focus is indicated by both a meter and peak highlights. HIGHLIGHT OFF Focus is displayed normally (MF assist cannot be used). 209 6 The Shooting Menus F MF ASSIST Choose how focus is displayed when MANUAL FOCUS is selected for FOCUS MODE (P 102). F FOCUS CHECK Options are the same as those for still photography, but settings must be adjusted separately (P 161). xF INSTANT AF SETTING This item is also found in the photo menus (P 162). Changes to one apply to the other. N Instant AF is disabled during movie recording. Use instant AF to focus before recording begins. xF DEPTH-OF-FIELD SCALE This item is also found in the photo menus (P 162). Changes to one apply to the other. xF AF RANGE LIMITER This item is also found in the photo menus (P 164). Changes to one apply to the other. 6 The Shooting Menus 210 AF/MF SETTING (Movie Recording) F TOUCH SCREEN MODE Choose the shooting operations performed using touch controls. Mode AF AREA Touch screen mode off. N • The behavior of the touch screen varies with the AF mode. • To disable touch controls and hide the touch screen mode indicator, select OFF for D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > TOUCH SCREEN SETTING > x TOUCH SCREEN SETTING. 211 6 The Shooting Menus OFF Description Tapping the display focuses the camera on the selected point. Use the shutter button to start and stop recording. • When SINGLE AF is selected for FOCUS MODE, you can refocus at any time by tapping your subject in the display. • When CONTINUOUS AF is chosen for FOCUS MODE, the camera will continuously adjust focus for changes in the distance to the subject at point selected by tapping the display. • When MANUAL FOCUS is selected for FOCUS MODE, the camera will focus using autofocus if you tap the display before recording begins; during recording, you can tap the display again to move the focus area to a new location. Tap to position the focus area. Use the shutter button to start and stop recording. • When SINGLE AF is selected for FOCUS MODE, you can reposition the focus area at any time by tapping your subject in the display. To focus, use the button to which AF-ON is assigned. • When CONTINUOUS AF is chosen for FOCUS MODE, the camera will continuously adjust focus for changes in the distance to the subject at point selected by tapping the display. • When MANUAL FOCUS is selected for FOCUS MODE, you can tap the display to position the focus area over your subject. Touch Controls for Focus Zoom Different touch controls are used during focus zoom (focus check enabled). Central Area Tapping the center of the display performs the operations below. Mode AF AREA OFF 6 Operation performed SINGLE AF: AF MANUAL FOCUS: Instant AF SINGLE AF: AF MANUAL FOCUS: Instant AF SINGLE AF/MANUAL FOCUS: OFF The Shooting Menus Other Areas Tapping other areas simply scrolls the display, whether during still photography or movie recording and regardless of the option selected for touch screen mode. 212 AF/MF SETTING (Movie Recording) FOCUS CHECK LOCK Choose whether focus zoom remains in effect once movie recording begins. Options ON OFF 6 The Shooting Menus 213 AUDIO SETTING (Movie Recording) Adjust settings for audio recorded during filming. To display audio settings, press MENU/OK in the movie shooting display and select the P (AUDIO SETTING) tab. AUDIO SETTING INTERNAL MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT EXTERNAL MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT MIC JACK SETTING MIC LEVEL LIMITER WIND FILTER LOW CUT FILTER HEADPHONES VOLUME MIC/REMOTE RELEASE EXIT INTERNAL MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT Adjust the recording level for the built-in microphone. Option AUTO MANUAL OFF 6 Description The camera adjusts the recording level automatically. Adjust the recording level manually. Choose from 25 recording levels. Turn the built-in microphone off. EXTERNAL MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT Adjust the recording level for external microphones. The Shooting Menus Option AUTO MANUAL OFF Description The camera adjusts the recording level automatically. Adjust the recording level manually. Choose from 25 recording levels. Disable recording using external microphones. MIC JACK SETTING Specify the type of hardware connected via the microphone/remote release connector. Option MIC LINE 214 Description Choose this option for direct connection to an external microphone. Choose this option for external audio devices connected via line output. AUDIO SETTING (Movie Recording) MIC LEVEL LIMITER Reduces distortion caused by input that exceeds the limits of the microphone’s audio circuits. Options ON OFF WIND FILTER Choose whether to enable wind noise reduction during movie recording. Options ON OFF LOW CUT FILTER Choose whether to enable the low-cut filter, reducing low-frequency noise during movie recording. Options ON OFF 6 Option 0 1—10 Description Mute output to the headphones. Choose a volume of from 1 to 10. MIC/REMOTE RELEASE Specify whether the device connected to the microphone/remote release connector is a microphone or a remote release. Options m MIC n REMOTE 215 The Shooting Menus HEADPHONES VOLUME Adjust the headphone volume. AUDIO SETTING (Movie Recording) XLR MIC ADAPTER SETTING Adjust microphone input channel settings and the like for use with XLR microphone adapters. Option 6 The Shooting Menus Description Record four-channel (quadraphonic) sound with the help of the camera’s built-in microphone, or two-channel (stereo) sound using only a microphone connected via the XLR microphone adapter. MIC INPUT CHANNEL • 4ch XLR+CAMERA: Record four-channel sound with the help of the camera’s built-in microphone. • 2ch XLR ONLY: Record two-channel sound using only an external microphone connected via the XLR microphone adapter. Choose the source of sound output to headphones or other audio monitors during movie recording. XLR: Monitor sound from external microphones con• 4ch AUDIO MONITORING nected via the XLR microphone adapter. • CAMERA: Monitor sound from camera’s built-in microphone. Choose source of audio output to the HDMI connector. • XLR: Audio from external microphones connected via HDMI 4ch AUDIO the XLR microphone adapter is output to the HDMI conOUTPUT nector. • CAMERA: Audio from camera’s built-in microphone is output to the HDMI connector. N • If an external microphone is connected to the camera’s microphone jack, audio will be recorded not via the camera’s built-in microphone but via the external microphone instead. • Four-channel recording is available only when MOV is selected for movie file format. 216 TIME CODE SETTING (Movie Recording) Adjust time code (hour, minute, second, and frame number) display settings for movie recording. To display time code settings, press MENU/OK in the movie shooting display and select the Q (TIME CODE SETTING) tab. TIME CODE SETTING TIME CODE DISPLAY START TIME SETTING COUNT UP SETTING DROP FRAME HDMI TIME CODE OUTPUT EXIT TIME CODE DISPLAY Select ON to display time codes during movie recording and playback. Options ON OFF START TIME SETTING Choose the time code starting time. 6 COUNT UP SETTING Choose whether time is clocked continuously or only during movie recording. Option REC RUN FREE RUN Description Time is clocked only during movie recording. Time is clocked continuously. 217 The Shooting Menus Option Description MANUAL INPUT Choose a start time manually. CURRENT TIME Set the start time to the current time. RESET Set the start time to 00:00:00. TIME CODE SETTING (Movie Recording) DROP FRAME At frame rates of 59.94P, and 29.97P, a discrepancy will gradually develop between the time code (measured in seconds) and the actual recording time (measured in fractions of a second). Choose whether the camera drops frames as necessary to match the recording time to the time code. Option ON OFF Description The camera drops frames as necessary to maintain a strict match between the time code and the actual recording time. Frames are not dropped. N • The time code display varies with the option selected. ON OFF 6 • Selecting a frame rate of 23.98P disables frame drop. The Shooting Menus HDMI TIME CODE OUTPUT Choose whether time codes are output to HDMI devices. Options ON 218 OFF Playback and the Playback Menu 219 The Playback Display This section lists the indicators that may be displayed during playback. O For illustrative purposes, displays are shown with all indicators lit. A k j i h Playback and the Playback Menu 7 B C D E FG H I J 12/31/2023 1/999 g f e d c b a K Z Y X W V A Date and time..................................43, 45, 271 B Location data................................................305 C Frame-number display D Bluetooth ON/OFF E Image transfer order F Image transfer status G Number of frames selected for upload H Protected image ...........................................233 I Bluetooth host ..............................................247 J Frame number..............................................303 K Low battery ......................................................42 L Image quality................................................129 M Movie mode ..................................................187 N HEIF ..................................................................131 O Image size ......................................................128 P Film format ....................................................191 Q Film simulation ............................................132 R Dynamic range ............................................140 S HDR ..................................................................116 220 U T S R Q PO N M L T White balance ..............................................136 U Sensitivity .......................................................104 V Exposure compensation ............................107 W Aperture...............................................72, 75, 77 X Time code.......................................................217 Y Shutter speed .....................................72, 73, 77 Z Playback mode indicator .............................50 a Movie icon ........................................................63 b Four-channel (quadrophonic) audio ..............................................................184, 216 c HDR image ....................................................116 d Red-eye removal indicator........................178 e Filter ....................................................................81 f Photobook assist indicator .......................240 g DPOF print indicator ...................................242 h Voice memo ..................................................235 i Rating..............................................................236 j Gift image .........................................................50 k Face detection indicator ............................156 The Playback Display The DISP/BACK Button The DISP/BACK button controls the display of indicators during playback. Standard Information off 12/31/2023 1/999 Playback and the Playback Menu 12/31/2023 1/999 NEXT Info display 7 221 The Playback Display Viewing Photo Information The photo information display changes each time the focus stick (focus lever) is pressed up. Basic data Info display 1 12/31/2023 1/999 Playback and the Playback Menu 7 12/31/2023 1/999 NEXT LENS FOCAL LENGTH COLOR SPACE LENS MODULATION OPT. S.S F 23.0mm F5.6 23.0mm sRGB ON 12/31/2023 12:10 AM ISO BACK Info display 3 NEXT Info display 2 Zooming in on the Focus Point Press the center of the focus stick (focus lever) to zoom in on the focus point. Press again to return to full-frame playback. 222 Viewing Pictures Read this section for information on playback zoom and multi-frame playback. Use the rear command dial to go from full-frame playback to playback zoom or multi-frame playback. N Press DISP/BACK or MENU/OK to exit playback zoom or multi-frame playback and return to full-frame playback. Multi-frame playback Nine-frame view Playback zoom Medium zoom Playback and the Playback Menu Full-frame playback 7 Hundred- frame view Maximum zoom 223 Viewing Pictures Playback Zoom Rotate the rear command dial right to zoom in on the current picture, left to zoom out. To exit zoom, press DISP/BACK or MENU/OK. N The maximum zoom ratio varies with the option selected for H IMAGE QUALITY SETTING > IMAGE SIZE. Scroll When the picture is zoomed in, the focus stick (focus lever) can be used to view areas of the image not currently visible in the display. Playback and the Playback Menu 7 Navigation window Multi-Frame Playback To change the number of images displayed, rotate the rear command dial left when a picture is displayed full frame. N • Use the focus stick (focus lever) to highlight images and press MENU/OK to view the highlighted image full frame. • In the nine- and hundred-frame displays, press the focus stick up or down to view more pictures. 224 The Playback Menu Adjust playback settings. The playback menu is displayed when you press MENU/OK in playback mode. PLAY BACK MENU RAW CONVERSION HEIF TO JPEG/TIFF CONVERSION ERASE CROP RESIZE PROTECT IMAGE ROTATE VOICE MEMO SETTING EXIT Saving RAW Pictures in Another Format 1 2 3 Display a RAW picture. Highlight RAW CONVERSION in the playback menu. Press MENU/OK. A list of settings will be displayed. RAW CONVERSION REFLECT SHOOTING COND. FILE TYPE IMAGE SIZE IMAGE QUALITY PUSH/PULL PROCESSING DYNAMIC RANGE CREATE 4 5 CANCEL Press the focus stick (focus lever) up or down to highlight a setting. Press the focus stick right to display RAW CONVERSION options. 100% 200% 400% 225 Playback and the Playback Menu RAW CONVERSION Even if you don’t have a computer, you can use the camera to modify RAW pictures and save them in other formats. 7 Playback and the Playback Menu 7 6 7 Press the focus stick up or down to highlight the desired option. 8 Press the Q button. A preview of the copy will be displayed. 9 Press MENU/OK. The copy will be saved. Press MENU/OK to select the highlighted option. The settings list shown in Step 3 will be displayed. Repeat Steps 4 to 7 to adjust additional settings. N RAW conversion options can also be displayed by pressing the Q button when a RAW pictures is displayed during playback. The settings that can be adjusted when converting pictures from RAW to another format are: Setting REFLECT SHOOTING COND. FILE TYPE IMAGE SIZE IMAGE QUALITY PUSH/PULL PROCESSING DYNAMIC RANGE D RANGE PRIORITY FILM SIMULATION MONOCHROMATIC COLOR GRAIN EFFECT COLOR CHROME EFFECT 226 Description Create a copy using the settings in effect at the time the photo was taken. Choose a file format. Choose an image size. Adjust image quality. Adjust exposure. Enhance details in highlights for natural contrast. Reduce loss of detail in highlights and shadows for natural-looking results when photographing high-contrast scenes. Simulate the effects of different types of film. Choose a monochrome tint for photographs taken using FILM SIMULATION > a ACROS and b MONOCHROME. Add a film grain effect. Increase the range of tones available for rendering colors that tend to be highly saturated, such as reds, yellows, and greens. The Playback Menu Setting COLOR CHROME FX BLUE WHITE BALANCE WB SHIFT TONE CURVE COLOR SHARPNESS HIGH ISO NR CLARITY Description O Some settings may be unavailable depending on the options chosen when the picture was taken. Playback and the Playback Menu Increase the range of tones available for rendering blues. Adjust white balance. Fine-tune white balance. Adjust highlights and shadows. Adjust color density. Sharpen or soften outlines. Process the copy to reduce mottling. Increase definition. Improve definition by adjusting for diffraction and the LENS MODULATION OPTIMIZER slight loss of focus at the periphery of the lens. Choose the color space used for color reproduction. COLOR SPACE Reduce loss of detail in highlights and shadows. HDR MODE 7 227 HEIF TO JPEG/TIFF CONVERSION Convert HEIF pictures to JPEG or TIFF. SELECT IMAGES Select HEIF pictures for conversion. FILE FORMAT Choose a format for the converted pictures. Playback and the Playback Menu JPEG 7 228 Options TIFF 8bit TIFF 16bit The Playback Menu ERASE Delete individual pictures, multiple selected pictures, or all pictures. O Deleted pictures cannot be recovered. Protect important pictures or copy them to a computer or other storage device before proceeding. Option FRAME SELECTED FRAMES ALL FRAMES Description Delete pictures one at a time. Delete multiple selected pictures. Delete all unprotected pictures. 2 Press the focus stick (focus lever) left or right to scroll through pictures and press MENU/OK to delete. N • A confirmation dialog is not displayed before pictures are deleted; be sure the correct picture is selected before pressing MENU/OK. • Additional pictures can be deleted by pressing MENU/OK. Press the focus stick left or right to scroll through pictures and press MENU/OK to delete. Playback and the Playback Menu FRAME 1 Select FRAME for ERASE in the playback menu. 7 229 SELECTED FRAMES 1 Select SELECTED FRAMES for ERASE in the playback menu. Playback and the Playback Menu 7 2 Highlight pictures and press MENU/OK to select. • Selected pictures are indicated by check marks (R). • To deselect a highlighted picture, press MENU/OK again. 3 When the operation is complete, press DISP/BACK to display a confirmation dialog. 4 Highlight OK and press MENU/OK to delete the selected pictures. N Pictures in photobooks or printer orders are shown by S. ALL FRAMES 1 Select ALL FRAMES for ERASE in the playback menu. 2 A confirmation dialog will be displayed; highlight OK and press MENU/OK to delete all unprotected pictures. N • Pressing DISP/BACK cancels deletion; note that any pictures deleted before the button was pressed cannot be recovered. • If a message appears stating that the selected images are part of a DPOF print order, press MENU/OK to delete the pictures. 230 The Playback Menu CROP Create a cropped copy of the current picture. 1 2 3 Display the desired picture. 4 5 Press MENU/OK to display a confirmation dialog. Select CROP in the playback menu. Use the rear command dial to zoom in and out and press the focus stick (focus lever) up, down, left, or right to scroll the picture until the desired portion is displayed. N • The higher the zoom ratio, the smaller the number of pixels in the cropped copy. • If the size of the final copy will be a, YES will be displayed in yellow. • All copies have an aspect ratio of 3∶2. Playback and the Playback Menu Press MENU/OK again to save the cropped copy to a separate file. 7 231 RESIZE Create a small copy of the current picture. 1 2 3 Display the desired picture. 4 Press MENU/OK again to save the resized copy to a separate file. Select RESIZE in the playback menu. Highlight a size and press MENU/OK to display a confirmation dialog. Playback and the Playback Menu N The sizes available vary with the size of the original image. 7 232 The Playback Menu PROTECT Protect pictures from accidental deletion. Highlight one of the following options and press MENU/OK. Option FRAME SET ALL RESET ALL Description Protect selected pictures. Press the focus stick (focus lever) left or right to view pictures and press MENU/OK to select or deselect. Press DISP/BACK when the operation is complete. Protect all pictures. Remove protection from all pictures. or tablets removes upload marking. Playback and the Playback Menu O Protected pictures will be deleted when the memory card is formatted. N Protecting images currently selected for upload to paired smartphones 7 233 IMAGE ROTATE Rotate pictures. Playback and the Playback Menu 1 2 3 4 Select ON for D SCREEN SET-UP > AUTOROTATE PB. 5 Press MENU/OK. The picture will automatically be displayed in the selected orientation whenever it is played back on the camera. Display the desired picture. Select IMAGE ROTATE in the playback menu. Press the focus stick (focus lever) down to rotate the picture 90° clockwise, up to rotate it 90° counterclockwise. N • Protected pictures cannot be rotated. Remove protection before rotating pictures. • The camera may not be able to rotate pictures created with other devices. Pictures rotated on the camera will not be rotated when viewed on a computer or on other cameras. • Pictures taken with D SCREEN SET-UP > AUTOROTATE PB are automatically displayed in the correct orientation during playback. 7 234 The Playback Menu VOICE MEMO SETTING Add a voice memo to the current photograph. 1 2 3 Select ON for VOICE MEMO SETTING in the playback menu. Display a photo to which you wish to add a voice memo. Press and hold the AFON button to record a voice memo. Recording ends after 30 s or when you release the button. Playing Voice Memos Pictures with voice memos are indicated by q icons during playback. • To play the memo, press the AFON button. • A progress bar will be displayed while the memo plays back. • Volume can be adjusted by pressing MENU/OK to pause playback and then pressing the focus stick (focus lever) up or down to adjust the volume. Press MENU/OK again to resume playback. Volume can also be adjusted using D SOUND SET-UP > PLAYBACK VOLUME. Playback and the Playback Menu new memo will be recorded over any existing memos. N • The • Voice memos cannot be added to protected pictures. • Deleting the picture also deletes the memo. 7 235 RATING Rate pictures using stars. 1 2 Select RATING in the playback menu. Rotate the front command dial to choose a picture and the rear command dial to choose a rating of from 0 to 5 stars (“I”). Playback and the Playback Menu N • The focus stick (focus lever) can be used in place of the front command dial to choose a picture. • The rating dialog can also be displayed by pressing the AEL button in single-frame, nine-frame, or hundred-frame playback. • Use touch controls to zoom in or out. • Ratings cannot be applied to: - Protected pictures - Movies - “Gift” pictures (pictures taken with other cameras) 7 236 The Playback Menu TRANSFER IMAGE TO SMARTPHONE Select photos for upload to a paired smartphone or tablet via Bluetooth (P 247). 1 Select TRANSFER IMAGE TO SMARTPHONE > SELECT IMAGE & TRANSFER. N Select RESET ORDER to remove “upload to smartphone” marking from all pictures before proceeding. 2 Press DISP/BACK and select START TRANSFER. The selected pictures will be uploaded. SELECT IMAGE FRAME SELECT ALL SELECT RANGE SELECT FINISH/SETTING Playback and the Playback Menu 3 Mark pictures for upload. Highlight pictures and press MENU/OK to mark them for upload. • To display only pictures that meet selected criteria, press DISP/BACK before marking begins. • To select all pictures, press the Q button. • Selecting any two pictures with the AEL button also selects all pictures between them. 7 SELECT IMAGE & TRANSFER START TRANSFER FILTERING FINISH IMAGE SELECT AND START TRANSFER 237 Filtering Pictures To display only pictures that meet selected criteria, press DISP/BACK in the picture-selection dialog and select FILTERING. SELECT IMAGE & TRANSFER START TRANSFER FILTERING FILTERING THE IMAGE WITH CONDITIONS O Selecting FILTERING removes any existing upload marking. Playback and the Playback Menu 7 N • Image transfer orders can contain a maximum of 999 pictures. • The following cannot be selected for upload: - Protected pictures - Movies - RAW images - “Gift” pictures (pictures taken with other cameras) • If ON is selected for both IMAGE TRANSFER WHILE POWER OFF and Bluetooth/SMARTPHONE SETTING > Bluetooth ON/OFF in the network/USB settings menu, upload to the paired device will continue even while the camera is off. • When d SELECT & SMARTPHONE TRANSFER ORDER is selected for D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > a ISO BUTTON SETTING, the picture-selection dialog can be displayed by pressing the ISO button. 238 The Playback Menu xF WIRELESS COMMUNICATION Connect to smartphones running the latest apps. The smartphone can then be used to: • Control the camera and take pictures remotely • Receive pictures uploaded from the camera • Browse the pictures on the camera and download selected pictures • Upload location data to the camera for D BUTTON/ DIAL SETTING > a ISO BUTTON SETTING, you can connect to the smartphone using the ISO button. SLIDE SHOW View pictures in an automated slide show. Press MENU/OK to start and press the focus stick (focus lever) right or left to skip ahead or back. Press DISP/BACK at any time during the show to view onscreen help. The show can be ended at any time by pressing MENU/OK. N The camera will not turn off automatically while a slide show is in progress. 239 Playback and the Playback Menu N • For downloads and other information, visit: https://app.fujifilm-dsc.com/ • If r WIRELESS COMMUNICATION is selected 7 PHOTOBOOK ASSIST Create books from your favorite photos. Creating a Photobook 1 Select NEW BOOK for C PLAY BACK MENU > PHOTOBOOK ASSIST. 2 Scroll through the images and press the focus stick (focus lever) up to select or deselect. Press MENU/OK to exit when the book is complete. Playback and the Playback Menu N • Neither photographs a or smaller nor movies can be selected for photobooks. • The first picture selected becomes the cover image. Press the focus stick down to select the current image for the cover instead. 3 Highlight COMPLETE PHOTOBOOK and press MENU/OK (to select all photos for the book, choose SELECT ALL). The new book will be added to the list in the photobook assist menu. N • Books can contain up to 300 pictures. • Books that contain no photos are automatically deleted. 7 240 The Playback Menu Viewing Photobooks Highlight a book in the photobook assist menu and press MENU/OK to display the book, then press the focus stick (focus lever) left or right to scroll through the pictures. Playback and the Playback Menu Editing and Deleting Photobooks Display the photobook and press MENU/OK. The following options will be displayed; select the desired option and follow the onscreen instructions. • EDIT: Edit the book as described in “Creating a Photobook”. • ERASE: Delete the book. 7 241 PRINT ORDER (DPOF) Create a digital “print order” for DPOF-compatible printers. Playback and the Playback Menu 1 2 Select C PLAY BACK MENU > PRINT ORDER (DPOF). 3 Display a picture you wish to include in or remove from the print order. 4 Press the focus stick (focus lever) up or down to choose the number of copies (up to 99). Select WITH DATE s to print the date of recording on pictures, WITHOUT DATE to print pictures without dates, or RESET ALL to remove all pictures from the print order before proceeding. PRINT ORDER (DPOF) DPOF: 00001 01 SHEETS FRAME SET Total number of prints Number of copies 7 N • To remove a picture from the order, press the focus stick down until the number of copies is 0. • Repeat steps 3–4 to complete the print order. 5 The total number of prints is displayed in the monitor. Press MENU/OK to exit. N • The pictures in the current print order are indicated by a u icon during playback. • Print orders can contain a maximum of 999 pictures from a single memory card. • If a memory card is inserted containing a print order created by an- other camera, you will need to delete the order before creating as described above. 242 The Playback Menu instax PRINTER PRINT To print pictures to optional Fujifilm instax SHARE printers, first select instax PRINTER CONNECTION SETTING in the network/ USB settings menu and enter the instax SHARE printer name (SSID) and password, then follow the steps below. 1 2 Turn the printer on. Select C PLAY BACK MENU > instax PRINTER PRINT. The camera will connect to the printer. PRINTER PRINT instax-12345678 CONNECTING CANCEL 3 Use the focus stick (focus lever) to display the picture you want to print, then press MENU/OK. The picture will be sent to the printer and printing will start. PRINTER PRINT 100-0020 SET instax-12345678 CANCEL N • Pictures taken with other cameras cannot be printed. • The area printed is smaller than the area visible in the LCD monitor. • The displays may vary depending on the printer connected. 243 Playback and the Playback Menu FUJIFILM-CAMERA-1234 7 The Playback Menu DISP ASPECT Choose the aspect ratio used for the display of still pictures on High Definition (HD) devices (this option is available only when an HDMI cable is connected). Options Playback and the Playback Menu 16 : 9 3:2 N Choose 16 : 9 to display photos with an aspect ratio of 3 : 2 full screen. The pictures will be displayed full screen with tops and bottoms cropped out. 7 244 Network/USB Features and Settings 245 Overview This chapter outlines features that can among other things be used to upload pictures to, or control the camera and take pictures remotely from, a smartphone or computer. Supported Features This camera supports the following features: Feature Network/USB Features and Settings 8 Description Connect to smartphones via Bluetooth® and upload Connecting to the pictures or control the camera remotely while the smartphone app smartphone displays the view through the lens. Connect a card reader to a computer or smartphone USB card readers via USB and copy pictures from memory cards. Connect the camera to a computer via USB for use Web camera as a webcam. instax printers Print pictures on connected instax printers. Take pictures from a computer to which the camera Tethered photography is connected (“tethered”) via wireless LAN or USB. Harness the power of the camera’s image RAW processing processing engine when processing RAW pictures on a computer. Saving and Loading Save camera settings to, or load existing settings Settings from, a computer. 246 P 247 250 255 256 258 260 261 Connecting to Smartphones (Bluetooth) Connect the camera with a smartphone via Bluetooth® to copy pictures to the smartphone or control the camera remotely while previewing the view through the lens in the smartphone display. N The camera automatically switches to a wireless LAN connection when copying pictures to the smartphone. https://app.fujifilm-dsc.com/ N The apps available vary with the smartphone operating system. Connecting to a Smartphone Pair the camera with the smartphone and connect via Bluetooth®. Network/USB Features and Settings Installing Smartphone Apps Before establishing a connection between the smartphone and camera, you will need to install at least one dedicated smartphone app. Visit the following website and install the desired apps on your phone. 8 1 Press the x(Bluetooth) button when the camera is in shooting mode. N You can also proceed directly to Step 3 by holding the x button during playback. 247 2 Highlight Bluetooth and press MENU/OK. Bluetooth & FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING Bluetooth Bluetooth 3 Highlight PAIRING and press MENU/OK. Bluetooth PAIRING Bluetooth ON/OFF Network/USB Features and Settings 8 4 Launch the app on the smartphone and pair the smartphone with the camera. More information is available at the following website: https://app.fujifilm-dsc.com/ When pairing is complete, the camera and smartphone will automatically connect via Bluetooth. A smartphone icon and a white Bluetooth icon will appear in the camera display when a connection is established. N • Once the devices have been paired, the smartphone will automatically connect to the camera when the app is launched. • Disabling Bluetooth when the camera is not connected to a smartphone reduces the drain on the battery. 248 Connecting to Smartphones (Bluetooth) Using the Smartphone App Read this section for information on the options available for downloading pictures to your smartphone using the smartphone app. N Before proceeding, select ON for Bluetooth/SMARTPHONE SETTING > Bluetooth ON/OFF. Selecting and Downloading Pictures Using the Smartphone App You can download selected pictures to a smartphone using the smartphone app. https://app.fujifilm-dsc.com/ Uploading Pictures as They Are Taken Pictures taken with ON selected for Bluetooth/SMARTPHONE SETTING > AUTO IMAGE TRANSFER ORDER in the network/USB setting menu will automatically be uploaded to the paired device. N • If ON is selected for both IMAGE TRANSFER WHILE POWER OFF and Bluetooth/SMARTPHONE SETTING > Bluetooth ON/OFF in the network/USB settings menu, upload to the paired device will continue even while the camera is off. • Selecting ON for Bluetooth/SMARTPHONE SETTING > RESIZE IMAGE FOR SMARTPHONE in the network/USB setting menu enables compression, reducing file size for upload (P 264). • Pictures are uploaded in the format chosen for Bluetooth/ SMARTPHONE SETTING > SELECT FILE TYPE in the network/USB setting menu. Selecting Pictures for Upload in the Playback Menu Use TRANSFER IMAGE TO SMARTPHONE > SELECT IMAGE & TRANSFER to select pictures for upload to a paired smartphone or tablet via Bluetooth® (P 237). 249 Network/USB Features and Settings N More information is available from the following website: 8 Connecting to Smartphones (USB) Connect to smartphones and computers via USB to upload pictures from the camera. Copying Pictures to a Smartphone Before connecting to the smartphone to upload pictures via USB, select either AUTO or POWER SUPPLY OFF/COMM ON for USB POWER SUPPLY/COMM SETTING in the network/USB setting menu. Network/USB Features and Settings For Customers Using Android Devices How you will connect the camera depends on the type of USB connector with which your smartphone is equipped. Type-C Use the supplied USB cable. Supplied USB cable Type-C connector (male) 8 250 Type-C connector (male) Connecting to Smartphones (USB) Micro-B Use a USB on-the-go (OTG) cable. Third-party USB cable Type-C connector (male) USB OTG cable Micro-B connector (male) Type-A connector (male) with a USB Type-C–to– Mirco-B cable. Use an OTG cable. 1 Select either AUTO or POWER SUPPLY OFF/COMM ON for USB POWER SUPPLY/COMM SETTING in the network/USB setting menu. 2 3 Select USB CARD READER for CONNECTION MODE. Connect the camera and smartphone using a USB cable. N If the smartphone asks for permission for an app other than the “Camera Importer” to access the camera, tap “Cancel” and move on to the next step. 4 On your smartphone, tap the notification “Connected to USB PTP”. 5 From the recommended apps, select “Camera Importer”. The app will automatically start and allow you to import photos and movies to your smartphone. N If the message “There is no MTP device connected” appears on the app, please try again from step 3. 251 Network/USB Features and Settings O • The smartphone must support USB OTG. • The desired results cannot be achieved Type-A connector (female) 8 For Customers Using iOS Use a camera adapter. Given that the camera is equipped with a USB Type-C connector, you will need to supply a cable with a USB Type-A connector for connection to the camera adapter. Third-party USB cable Type-C connector (male) Network/USB Features and Settings 8 Apple Lightning to USB Camera Adapter Use an Apple Lightning to USB Camera Adapter Type-A connector (male) 1 Select POWER SUPPLY OFF/COMM ON for USB POWER SUPPLY/COMM SETTING in the network/USB setting menu. 2 3 Select USB CARD READER for CONNECTION MODE. Connect the camera and smartphone using a USB cable. Launch the Photos app to import photos and movies to your smartphone. O • A Type-C to Type-C USB cable is required for connection to iPad and other devices equipped with USB Type-C connectors. • The desired results cannot be achieved with a USB Type-C–to– Lightning cable. Use a camera adapter. 252 Connecting to Smartphones (USB) Connecting the Camera and Computer 1 Select either AUTO or POWER SUPPLY OFF/COMM ON for USB POWER SUPPLY/COMM SETTING in the network/USB setting menu. 2 3 4 5 Select USB CARD READER for CONNECTION MODE. Turn the camera off. Turn the computer on. Connect a USB cable. O The USB cable must be no more than 1 m (3.3 ft.) long and be suitable for data transfer. 6 7 Turn the camera on. Network/USB Features and Settings USB connector (Type-C) 8 Copy pictures to your computer. • Mac OS X/OS X/macOS: Pictures can be copied to your computer using Image Capture (supplied with your computer) or other software. Use a card reader to copy files over 4 GB in size. • Windows: Pictures can be copied to your computer using apps supplied with the operating system. 253 Connecting to Smartphones (USB) O • Turn the camera off before disconnecting the USB cable. • When connecting USB cables, be sure the connectors are fully in- Network/USB Features and Settings 8 serted in the correct orientation. Connect the camera directly to the computer; do not use a USB hub or keyboard. • Loss of power during transfer could result in loss of data or damage to the memory card. Insert a fresh or fully-charged battery before connecting the camera. • If a memory card containing a large number of images is inserted, there may be a delay before the software starts and you may be unable to import or save images. Use a memory card reader to transfer pictures. • Make sure that the indicator lamp is off or lit green before turning the camera off. • Do not disconnect the USB cable while transfer is in progress. Failure to observe this precaution could result in loss of data or damage to the memory card. • Disconnect the camera before inserting or removing memory cards. • In some cases, it may not be possible to access pictures saved to a network server using the software in the same way as on a standalone computer. • Do not immediately remove the camera from the system or disconnect the USB cable once the message stating that copying is in progress clears from the computer display. If the number of images copied is very large, data transfer may continue after the message has ceased to be displayed. • The user bears all applicable fees charged by the phone company or Internet service provider when using services that require an Internet connection. 254 Using the Camera as a Webcam The camera can be connected to a computer for use as a webcam. 1 Select either AUTO or POWER SUPPLY OFF/COMM ON for USB POWER SUPPLY/COMM SETTING in the network/USB setting menu. 2 3 Select USB WEBCAM for CONNECTION MODE. 4 Select the camera in the app where it will be used as a webcam. Connect the camera to the computer via USB and then turn the camera on (P 253). Network/USB Features and Settings 8 255 instax SHARE Printers Print pictures from your digital camera to instax SHARE printers. Establishing a Connection Select instax PRINTER CONNECTION SETTING in the network/USB setting menu and enter the instax SHARE printer name (SSID) and password. Network/USB Features and Settings The Printer Name (SSID) and Password The printer name (SSID) can be found on the bottom of the printer; the default password is “1111”. If you have already chosen a different password to print from a smartphone, enter that password instead. 8 256 instax SHARE Printers Printing Pictures 1 Turn the printer on. 2 Select C PLAY BACK MENU > instax PRINTER PRINT. The camera will connect to the printer. PRINTER PRINT instax-12345678 CONNECTING FUJIFILM-CAMERA-1234 CANCEL 3 Use the focus stick (focus lever) to display the picture you want to print, then press MENU/OK. PRINTER PRINT 100-0020 CANCEL N • Pictures taken with other cameras cannot be printed. • The area printed is smaller than the area visible in the LCD monitor. • The displays may vary depending on the printer connected. 4 The picture will be sent to the printer and printing will start. Network/USB Features and Settings SET instax-12345678 8 257 Tethered Photography Computers connected via USB or wireless LAN can be used to control the camera and take photographs remotely or to download pictures from the camera for storage. Tethered Photography via USB Connect the camera to a computer via USB for tethered photography. Network/USB Features and Settings 8 1 Select either AUTO or POWER SUPPLY OFF/COMM ON for USB POWER SUPPLY/COMM SETTING in the network/USB setting menu. 2 Select USB TETHER SHOOTING AUTO or USB TETHER SHOOTING FIXED for CONNECTION MODE. O • If USB TETHER SHOOTING AUTO is selected, tethered pho- tography will be enabled automatically when the computer to which the camera is connected is turned on. When the computer is off or not connected, tethered photography will be suspended and pictures will be saved to the camera memory card. • If the camera is disconnected from the computer while USB TETHER SHOOTING FIXED is selected, it will continue to function in tethered mode and no pictures will be recorded. 3 Connect the camera to the computer via USB and then turn the camera on (P 253). 258 Tethered Photography 4 Take pictures via tethered photography. Use software such as “Adobe Lightroom Classic + FUJIFILM Tether Shooting Plug-in”, “FUJIFILM X Acquire”, or “Capture One”. N • To take pictures when using X Acquire, use the shutter button on the camera. • For more information on tethered photography, visit the website below. https://app.fujifilm-dsc.com/en/tether/ • Visit the website below for information on the software used. https://fujifilm-x.com/products/software/ 1 Connect the camera to a wireless LAN using NETWORK SETTING in the network/USB setting menu. 2 Select WIRELESS TETHER SHOOTING FIXED for CONNECTION MODE. 3 Take pictures via tethered photography. Use software such as “Adobe Lightroom Classic + FUJIFILM Tether Shooting Plug-in” or “FUJIFILM X Acquire”. N • To take pictures when using X Acquire, use the shutter button on the camera. • For more information on tethered photography, visit the website below. https://app.fujifilm-dsc.com/en/tether/ • Visit the website below for information on the software used. https://fujifilm-x.com/products/software/ 259 Network/USB Features and Settings Tethered Photography via Wireless LAN Connect the camera to a computer via wireless LAN for tethered photography. 8 RAW Processing Using X RAW STUDIO, you can harness the power of the camera’s image processing engine when processing RAW pictures on a computer. Network/USB Features and Settings 1 Select either AUTO or POWER SUPPLY OFF/COMM ON for USB POWER SUPPLY/COMM SETTING in the network/USB setting menu. 2 Select USB RAW CONV./BACKUP RESTORE for CONNECTION MODE. 3 Connect the camera to the computer via USB and then turn the camera on (P 253). 4 Launch X RAW STUDIO. RAW processing can be performed using X RAW STUDIO. N Visit the website below for information on the software used. https://fujifilm-x.com/products/software/ 8 260 Saving and Loading Settings Camera settings can be saved to or loaded from computers using FUJIFILM X Acquire. Saving and Loading Settings Using a Computer 1 Select either AUTO or POWER SUPPLY OFF/COMM ON for USB POWER SUPPLY/COMM SETTING in the network/USB setting menu. Select USB RAW CONV./BACKUP RESTORE for CONNECTION MODE. 3 Connect the camera to the computer via USB and then turn the camera on (P 253). 4 Launch FUJIFILM X Acquire. Camera settings can be saved or loaded using FUJIFILM X Acquire. N Visit the website below for information on the software used. https://fujifilm-x.com/products/software/ Network/USB Features and Settings 2 8 261 Network/USB Setting Menus Adjust camera network and USB settings. To access network/USB settings from the shooting or playback display, press MENU/OK and select the I (network/USB setting) tab. NETWORK/USB SETTING Bluetooth/SMARTPHONE SETTING AIRPLANE MODE NETWORK SETTING PRINTER CONNECTION SETTING CONNECTION MODE USB POWER SUPPLY/COMM SETTING INFORMATION RESET WIRELESS SETTING EXIT Bluetooth/SMARTPHONE SETTING Adjust Bluetooth-related settings as well as a variety of smartphone-related settings. Network/USB Features and Settings 8 N Be sure your smartphone or tablet is running the latest version of the smartphone app. PAIRING REGISTRATION Pair the camera with a smartphone or tablet to which the smartphone app has been installed. SELECT PAIRING DESTINATION Choose a connection from a list of devices with which the camera has been paired using PAIRING REGISTRATION. Select NO CONNECTION to exit without connecting. DELETE PAIRING REG. Delete existing pairing information for a smartphone or tablet. N The selected device will be removed from the pairing list. 262 Network/USB Setting Menus Bluetooth DEVICE LIST List the devices with which the camera is paired (other than the smartphone) or end pairing with selected devices. Bluetooth ON/OFF If ON is selected, the camera will automatically connect with paired smartphones or tablets running the smartphone app. Options ON OFF Options ON OFF SMARTPHONE LOCATION SYNC. Select ON to enable ongoing download of location data from paired smartphones or tablets. Options ON OFF O Location data will only be downloaded while the smartphone app is running. Download will be interrupted if pairing is ended. The camera location data icon will be displayed in red if location data have not been updated for over 30 minutes. NAME Choose a name (NAME) to identify the camera on the wireless network (the camera is assigned a unique name by default). 263 Network/USB Features and Settings AUTO IMAGE TRANSFER ORDER Select ON to upload pictures automatically as they are taken. 8 IMAGE TRANSFER WHILE POWER OFF If ON is selected, the camera will continue to upload pictures to paired smartphones or tablets even while off. Options ON OFF RESIZE IMAGE FOR SMARTPHONE Select ON (recommended) to enable compression, reducing file size for upload. Options Network/USB Features and Settings 8 ON OFF N • The pictures on the camera memory card are not affected. • Compression is used only for pictures taken at a size of L. WIRELESS COM. FREQUENCY SETTING Choose the band for wireless LAN connections. Options 2.4GHz (IEEE802.11 b/g/n) 5GHz (IEEE802.11 a/n/ac) O • Some countries and regions prohibit outdoor use of certain channels in the 5 GHz band. Check whether use of the 5.2 GHz (W52) band is permitted before selecting the 5 GHz option. • The options available vary with the country or region of sale. SELECT FILE TYPE Choose the format or formats used for upload. Pictures can be uploaded in JPEG format and/or HEIF. 264 Network/USB Setting Menus AIRPLANE MODE Select ON to disable the camera’s wireless LAN and Bluetooth features. Options ON OFF NETWORK SETTING Adjust settings for connection to wireless networks. Option Description • SIMPLE SETUP: Connect to an access point using simple settings. IP ADDRESS SETTING • MANUAL SETUP: Manually adjust settings for connec- tion to a wireless network. Choose the network from a list (SELECT FROM NETWORK LIST) or enter the name manually (ENTER SSID). • AUTO: The IP address is assigned automatically. • MANUAL: Assign an IP address manually. Manually choose the IP address (IP ADDRESS), subnet mask (SUBNET MASK), and gateway address (GATEWAY ADDRESS). instax PRINTER CONNECTION SETTING Adjust settings for connection to optional Fujifilm instax SHARE printers (P 256). 265 Network/USB Features and Settings ACCESS POINT SETTING 8 CONNECTION MODE Adjust settings for connection to external devices. Option Network/USB Features and Settings 8 Description Connecting the camera to a computer via USB automatically enables data transfer mode, allowing data to be copied to USB CARD READER the computer. The camera functions normally when not connected. Connect the camera to a computer via USB for use as a USB WEBCAM webcam. The camera can be controlled from computers, gimbals, drones, or other devices connected via USB. The camera automatically enters “tethered shooting” (i.e., remote-control) mode when the external device is turned on and returns to normal operation when the external device turned off or disconnected. • Photographs can be taken remotely and automatically USB TETHER downloaded to computers running Capture One, Adobe® SHOOTING AUTO Photoshop® Lightroom® + Tether Plugin, or FUJIFILM X Acquire. FUJIFILM X Acquire can also be used to save and load camera settings. • Remote photography and movie recording are available when the camera is connected to a compatible device such as a gimbal or drone. Use camera controls to switch between still photography and movie recording. The features available vary with the device connected. 266 Network/USB Setting Menus Option O D POWER MANAGEMENT > AUTO POWER OFF settings also apply during tethered shooting. To prevent the camera turning off automatically, select OFF for AUTO POWER OFF. N For information on compatible computer software, see “Software for Use with Your Camera” (P 352). 267 Network/USB Features and Settings Description As for USB TETHER SHOOTING AUTO, except that the camera remains in “tethered shooting” (remote-control) mode when the external device is off or not connected, alUSB TETHER lowing the device to resume control when the connection SHOOTING FIXED is re-established after an accidental disconnection or other disruption. At default settings, pictures are not recorded to the memory card. Choose this option for wireless remote photography. Select WIRELESS TETHER an access point using NETWORK SETTING in the network/ SHOOTING FIXED USB setting menu. Connecting the camera to a computer via USB automatically enables USB RAW conversion/backup restore mode. The camera functions normally when not connected. USB RAW CONV. (requires FUJIFILM X RAW STUDIO): Use the camUSB RAW CONV./ • era’s image processing engine to rapidly convert RAW files BACKUP RESTORE to other formats while maintaining image quality. • BACKUP RESTORE (requires FUJIFILM X Acquire): Save and load camera settings. Reconfigure the camera in an instant or share settings with other cameras of the same type. 8 Network/USB Setting Menus USB POWER SUPPLY/COMM SETTING Choose whether USB connections to computers, smartphones, or other devices are used for power delivery or data transfer. Option Description The camera switches between power delivery and data transAUTO fer automatically. POWER SUPPLY ON/ The camera draws power from the connected device, reducing COMM OFF the drain on the battery. Data transfer is disabled. POWER SUPPLY The camera can exchange data with, but not draw power from, OFF/COMM ON the connected device. Network/USB Features and Settings 8 O The camera cannot draw power from Lightning connections or from devices that do not supply power. Select POWER SUPPLY OFF/COMM ON before connecting the camera to such devices. The connection may not be available for data transfer or the like when POWER SUPPLY ON/COMM OFF is selected. N Regardless of the option selected, the battery will charge while the camera is off. INFORMATION View the camera’s MAC, Bluetooth, and wireless network IP addresses. RESET WIRELESS SETTING Restore wireless settings to their default values. 268 The Setup Menus 269 USER SETTING Adjust basic camera settings. To access basic camera settings, press MENU/OK, select the D (SET UP) tab, and choose USER SETTING. USER SETTING FORMAT bAREA SETTING DATE/TIME TIME DIFFERENCE a x MY MENU SETTING F MY MENU SETTING SENSOR CLEANING EXIT FORMAT To format a memory card: 1 2 Select D USER SETTING > FORMAT in the D (SET UP) tab. A confirmation dialog will be displayed. To format the memory card, highlight OK and press MENU/OK. FORMAT FORMAT OK? OK CANCEL The Setup Menus N To exit without formatting the memory card, select CANCEL or press DISP/BACK. O • All data—including protected pictures—will be deleted from the memory card. Be sure important files have been copied to a computer or other storage device. • Do not open the battery-chamber cover during formatting. 9 270 USER SETTING b AREA SETTING Adjust settings for your current time zone. AREA SETTING Choose your time zone from a map. DAYLIGHT SAVINGS Turn daylight saving time on or off. Option ON OFF Description Daylight saving time on. Daylight saving time off. DATE/TIME To set the camera clock: Select D USER SETTING > DATE/TIME in the D (SET UP) tab. 3 Press MENU/OK to set the clock. Press the focus stick (focus lever) left or right to highlight the year, month, day, hour, or minute and press up or down to change. To change the order in which the year, month, and day are displayed, highlight the date format and press the focus stick up or down. The Setup Menus 1 2 9 271 TIME DIFFERENCE Switch the camera clock instantly from your home time zone to the local time at your destination when traveling. To specify the difference between your local and home time zone: O Use b AREA SETTING to choose your home time zone before selecting a local time zone using g LOCAL. 1 2 Highlight g LOCAL and press MENU/OK. Use the focus stick (focus lever) to choose the local time zone. Press MENU/OK when settings are complete. N Select ON to enable daylight saving time. To set the camera clock to local time, highlight g LOCAL and press MENU/OK. To set the clock to the time in your home time zone, select h HOME. Options g LOCAL h HOME The Setup Menus N If g LOCAL is selected, g will be displayed in yellow for about three seconds when the camera is turned on. Qa Choose a language. 9 272 USER SETTING x MY MENU SETTING Edit the items listed in the E (MY MENU) tab, a personalized custom menu of frequently-used photo menu options (P 309). F MY MENU SETTING Edit the items listed in the E (MY MENU) tab, a personalized custom menu of frequently-used movie menu options (P 309). SENSOR CLEANING Remove dust from the camera image sensor. Option OK Description Clean the sensor immediately. Sensor cleaning will be performed when the camera is WHEN SWITCHED ON turned on. Sensor cleaning will be performed when the camera turns WHEN SWITCHED OFF off (sensor cleaning is not however performed if the camera turns off in playback mode). N Dust that cannot be removed using sensor cleaning can be removed using a blower (P 367). The Setup Menus BATTERY AGE Check battery age. Age is expressed as a number between 0 and 4. The higher the number, the older the battery. BATTERY AGE 9 N The older the battery, the faster it loses its charge. We recommend that batteries be replaced as they wear out. 273 USER SETTING SOUND & FLASH Select OFF to disable the speaker, flash, illuminator, and self-timer lamp in situations in which camera sounds and lights may be unwelcome. Options ON OFF RESET Reset shooting or setup menu options to default values. 1 Highlight the desired option and press MENU/OK. Option The Setup Menus 9 Description Reset all photo menu settings other than custom white STILL MENU RESET balance and custom settings banks created using x EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING to default values. Reset all movie menu settings other than custom white MOVIE MENU RESET balance and custom settings banks created using F EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING to default values. Reset all setup menu settings other than DATE/TIME, SET-UP RESET b AREA SETTING, TIME DIFFERENCE, and COPYRIGHT INFO to default values. Reset all settings other than custom white balance to INITIALIZE default values. 2 A confirmation dialog will be displayed; highlight OK and press MENU/OK. REGULATORY To view electronic copies of the product model number, and other certificates, select D USER SETTING > REGULATORY in the setup menu. 274 SOUND SETTING Make changes to camera sounds. To access sound settings, press MENU/OK, select the D (SET UP) tab, and choose SOUND SET-UP. SOUND SETTING AF BEEP VOL. SELF-TIMER BEEP VOL. OPERATION VOL. FREC START/STOP VOLUME tELECTRONIC SHUTTER VOLUME tELECTRONIC SHUTTER SOUND sELECTRONIC SHUTTER VOLUME sELECTRONIC SHUTTER SOUND EXIT AF BEEP VOL. Choose the volume of the beep that sounds when the camera focuses. The beep can be muted by selecting eOFF. Options b (high) c (medium) d (low) eOFF (mute) SELF-TIMER BEEP VOL. Choose the volume of the beep that sounds while the self-timer is active. The beep can be muted by selecting eOFF. c (medium) d (low) eOFF (mute) OPERATION VOL. Adjust the volume of the sounds produced when camera controls are operated. Choose eOFF to disable control sounds. 9 Options b (high) c (medium) The Setup Menus Options b (high) d (low) eOFF (mute) 275 F REC START/STOP VOLUME Choose the volume at the start and end of movie recording. Options b (high) c (medium) d (low) eOFF (mute) t ELECTRONIC SHUTTER VOLUME Adjust the volume of the sounds produced by the mechanical shutter. Options b (high) c (medium) d (low) eOFF (mute) t ELECTRONIC SHUTTER SOUND Choose the sound made by the mechanical shutter. i SOUND 1 The Setup Menus 9 276 Options j SOUND 2 k SOUND 3 SOUND SETTING s ELECTRONIC SHUTTER VOLUME Adjust the volume of the sounds produced by the electronic shutter. Choose eOFF to disable the shutter sound. Options b (high) c (medium) d (low) eOFF (mute) s ELECTRONIC SHUTTER SOUND Choose the sound made by the electronic shutter. Options j SOUND 2 i SOUND 1 k SOUND 3 PLAYBACK VOLUME Adjust the volume for movie playback. 0 1 2 3 4 Options 5 6 7 8 9 10 4ch AUDIO PLAYBACK Adjust audio settings for use when viewing 4ch movies. Description XLR The camera plays audio recorded via external microphones connected via the XLR microphone adapter. CAMERA The camera plays audio recorded via the camera’s built-in microphone or external microphones connected via the microphone jack. N You can also switch sources while viewing the playback display by pressing the center of the focus stick (focus lever). 277 The Setup Menus Option 9 SCREEN SETTING Make changes to display settings. To access display settings, press MENU/OK, select the D (SET UP) tab, and choose SCREEN SET-UP. SCREEN SETTING VIEW MODE SETTING EVF BRIGHTNESS EVF COLOR EVF COLOR ADJUSTMENT LCD BRIGHTNESS LCD COLOR LCD COLOR ADJUSTMENT IMAGE DISP. EXIT VIEW MODE SETTING Adjust settings for eye sensor, EVF (electronic viewfinder), or LCD monitor view modes (P 14). EVF BRIGHTNESS Adjust the brightness of the display in the electronic viewfinder. Option AUTO The Setup Menus 9 MANUAL Description The camera automatically adjusts brightness around a selected level in response to changes in ambient lighting conditions. Adjust brightness manually; choose from options between −7 and +5. EVF COLOR Adjust the saturation of the display in the electronic viewfinder. −5 278 −4 −3 −2 −1 Options 0 +1 +2 +3 +4 +5 SCREEN SETTING EVF COLOR ADJUSTMENT Adjust the color of the display in the electronic viewfinder. 1 Adjust colors using the focus stick (focus lever). EVF COLOR ADJUSTMENT SET 2 CANCEL Press MENU/OK. LCD BRIGHTNESS Adjust monitor brightness. −5 −4 −3 −2 −1 Options 0 +1 +2 +3 +4 +5 Options 0 +1 +2 +3 +4 +5 LCD COLOR Adjust monitor saturation. −4 −3 −2 −1 LCD COLOR ADJUSTMENT Adjust the color of the display in the LCD monitor. 1 2 Adjust colors using the focus stick (focus lever). The Setup Menus −5 9 Press MENU/OK. 279 IMAGE DISP. Choose how long images are displayed after shooting. Option CONTINUOUS 1.5 SEC 0.5 SEC OFF Description Pictures are displayed until the MENU/OK button is pressed or the shutter button is pressed halfway. To zoom in on the active focus point, press the center of the focus stick (focus lever); press again to cancel zoom. Pictures are displayed for the selected time or until the shutter button is pressed halfway. Pictures are not displayed after shooting. N • Colors may differ slightly from those in the final image. • “Noise” mottling may be visible at high sensitivities. AUTOROTATE DISPLAYS Choose whether the indicators in the viewfinder and LCD monitor rotate to match camera orientation. Options ON The Setup Menus 9 280 OFF SCREEN SETTING PREVIEW EXP./WB IN MANUAL MODE Choose whether to enable exposure and/or white balance preview in manual exposure mode. Option Description PREVIEW EXP./WB Enable exposure and white balance preview. Preview white balance only. Choose this option in situations in PREVIEW WB which exposure is likely to change during shooting, as may be the case when you use a flash during daylight. Disable exposure and white balance preview. Choose this option in situations in which both exposure and white balance OFF are likely to change during shooting, as may be the case when you use a flash with an incandescent monitoring lamp. NATURAL LIVE VIEW Choose whether the effects of film simulation, white balance, and other settings are visible in the monitor. Option OFF The Setup Menus ON Description The effects of camera settings are not visible in the monitor, but shadows in low-contrast, back-lit scenes and other hardto-see subjects more visible. Colors and tone will differ from those in the final picture. The display will however be adjusted to show the effects of monochrome and sepia settings. The effects of film simulation, white balance, and other settings can be previewed in the monitor. 9 281 F-Log VIEW ASSIST Select ON to display a tone-corrected preview (equivalent to BT.709) when recording or viewing F-log movies. Options ON OFF ELECTRONIC LEVEL SETTING Adjust settings for use when taking pictures using the virtual horizon display (P 21). FRAMING GUIDELINE Choose a framing grid for shooting mode. Option G GRID 24 F GRID 9 Display The Setup Menus 9 P For “rule of thirds” composition. P H HD FRAMING P A six-by-four grid. Frame HD pictures in the crop shown by the lines at the top and bottom of the display. N Framing guides are not shown at default settings but can be displayed using D SCREEN SET-UP > DISP. CUSTOM SETTING (P 19). 282 SCREEN SETTING AUTOROTATE PB Choose ON to automatically rotate “tall” (portrait-orientation) pictures during playback. Options ON OFF FOCUS SCALE UNITS Choose the units used for the focus distance indicator. Options METERS FEET APERTURE UNIT FOR CINEMA LENS Choose whether the camera displays aperture as a T-number (used for movie camera lenses) or an f/-number (used for still camera lenses) when an optional FUJINON MKX-series lens is attached. For information on using cinema lenses, see the documentation provided with the lens. Option F NUMBER DISP. CUSTOM SETTING Choose the items shown in the standard indicator display (P 19). 283 The Setup Menus T NUMBER Description A measure of lens aperture commonly used by cinematographers. Lens transmittance is taken into account to better calculate exposure. A measure of lens aperture commonly used by photographers. Lens transmittance is assumed to be 100%, meaning that the same aperture may produce different exposures depending on the lens. 9 LARGE INDICATORS MODE(EVF) Select ON to display large indicators in the electronic viewfinder. The indicators displayed can be selected using D SCREEN SET-UP > LARGE INDICATORS DISP. SETTING. 5 4 3 2 1 0 -1 -2 -3 -4 -5 OFF ON O Some icons are not displayed when ON is selected for LARGE INDICATORS MODE(EVF) (P 11). N If LARGE INDICATORS MODE is assigned to a function button, the button can be used to toggle LARGE INDICATORS MODE on (ON) and off (OFF) (P 317). The Setup Menus 9 284 SCREEN SETTING LARGE INDICATORS MODE(LCD) Select ON to display large indicators in the LCD monitor. The indicators displayed can be selected using D SCREEN SET-UP > LARGE INDICATORS DISP. SETTING. OFF ON O Some icons are not displayed when ON is selected for LARGE INDICATORS MODE(LCD) (P 13). N If LARGE INDICATORS MODE is assigned to a function button, the button can be used to toggle LARGE INDICATORS MODE on (ON) and off (OFF) (P 317). The Setup Menus 9 285 LARGE INDICATORS DISP. SETTING Choose the indicators displayed when ON is selected for D SCREEN SET-UP > LARGE INDICATORS MODE(EVF) or LARGE INDICATORS MODE(LCD). LARGE INDICATORS DISP. SETTING Expo. DISP. Scale L1 L2 L3 L4 R1 R2 Option A Expo. DISP. B d Scale C L1, L2, L3, L4 D R1, R2, R3, R4 The Setup Menus 9 286 Description Choose the items listed at the bottom of the display. Selected items are indicated by check marks (R); to deselect, highlight the check marks and press MENU/OK. Select ON to display the exposure indicator. Choose up to four large icons for display on the left side of the screen. Choose up to four large icons for display on the right side of the screen. SCREEN SETTING INFORMATION CONTRAST ADJ. Adjust display contrast. Option HIGH CONTRAST STANDARD LOW CONTRAST DARK AMBIENT LIGHTING Description High contrast. Normal contrast. Low contrast. Contrast adjusted for dim ambient lighting. LOCATION INFO Select ON to display location info downloaded from a smartphone. Options ON OFF The Setup Menus 9 287 SCREEN SETTING x Q MENU BACKGROUND Choose the background color used for the quick menu when it is displayed during still photography. Options TRANSPARENT BLACK F Q MENU BACKGROUND Choose the background color used for the quick menu when it is displayed during movie recording. Options TRANSPARENT The Setup Menus 9 288 BLACK BUTTON/DIAL SETTING Access options for camera controls. To access control options, press MENU/OK, select the D (SET UP) tab, and choose BUTTON/DIAL SETTING. BUTTON/DIAL SETTING FOCUS LEVER SETTING EDIT/SAVE QUICK MENU EDIT/SAVE QUICK MENU FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING POWER ZOOM LENS FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING COMMAND DIAL SETTING o S.S OPERATION COMMAND DIAL DIRECTION EXIT FOCUS LEVER SETTING Choose the functions performed by pressing the center of the focus stick (focus lever) or by pressing the stick up, down, left, or right. PUSH Option OFF TILT o Option OFF DIRECT AF POINT SELECTION EDIT FOCUS AREA The Setup Menus Description Pressing the center of the stick has no effect. Press the center of the stick to choose the focus area size. If g FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING or SUBJECT EDIT FOCUS AREA DETECTION SETTING is on, you can instead position the focus frame over the desired face, eye, animal, or object. Press the center of the stick to zoom in on the active focus ZOOM area (P 99). RESET TO CENTER Press the center of the stick to select the center focus area. 9 Description Pressing the stick up, down, left, or right has no effect. Choose the focus area without leaving the shooting display. Press the stick up, down, left, or right to view a focus-area display and choose the focus area. 289 x EDIT/SAVE QUICK MENU Choose the items displayed in the quick menu during still photography (P 311). F EDIT/SAVE QUICK MENU Choose the items displayed in the quick menu when filming movies (P 311). FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING Choose the roles played by the function buttons (P 317). POWER ZOOM LENS FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING Choose the roles played by the function buttons available on some power zoom lenses (P 325). The Setup Menus 9 290 BUTTON/DIAL SETTING COMMAND DIAL SETTING Choose whether to reverse the roles played by the front and rear command dials in each of the following modes. Option P S A M Description Reverse the dials used for program shift and exposure compensation in mode P (program AE). Reverse the dials used for shutter-speed selection and exposure compensation in mode S (shutter-priority AE). Reverse the dials used for aperture selection and exposure compensation in mode A (aperture-priority AE). Reverse the dials used for shutter-speed and aperture selection in mode M (manual). o S.S OPERATION Select OFF to disable shutter-speed fine-tuning using the command dials. Options ON OFF Option - ––––– + + ––––– - Description Rotate the dial right for higher values or to move to the next item. Rotate the dial left for higher values or to move to the next item. 291 The Setup Menus COMMAND DIAL DIRECTION Choose the direction in which the command dials are rotated to choose values. Settings for the front and rear command dials can be adjusted separately. 9 SHUTTER AF Choose whether the camera focuses when the shutter button is pressed halfway. Option Description AF-S • ON: Focus locks when the shutter button is pressed halfway. • OFF: No focus operation is performed when the shutter button is pressed halfway. • ON: The camera focuses while the shutter button is pressed AF-C halfway. • OFF: No focus operation is performed when the shutter button is pressed halfway. SHUTTER AE If ON is selected, exposure will lock while the shutter button is pressed halfway. The setting for focus mode CONTINUOUS AF (AF-C) can be adjusted separately from that for modes SINGLE AF (AF-S) and MANUAL FOCUS. Options ON OFF The Setup Menus N Select OFF to allow the camera to adjust exposure before each shot taken in burst mode. 9 292 BUTTON/DIAL SETTING SHOOT WITHOUT LENS Choose ON to enable the shutter release when no lens is attached. Options ON OFF SHOOT WITHOUT CARD Choose whether the shutter can be released without a memory card inserted in the camera. Option ON OFF Description When no memory card is inserted, the shutter can be released to test camera function and the shooting and setup menus can be displayed. The shutter is disabled if no memory card is inserted, preventing accidental loss of pictures taken without a memory card. The Setup Menus 9 293 LENS ZOOM/FOCUS SETTING Adjust settings for compatible lenses with focus rings or power zoom. FOCUS RING ROTATE Choose the direction in which the focus ring is rotated to increase the focus distance. Options X CW (clockwise) Y CCW (counterclockwise) FOCUS RING OPERATION Choose how the camera adjusts focus in response to the movement of the focus ring. Option Description NONLINEAR Focus is adjusted at the same rate as the ring is rotated. Focus is adjusted linearly according to the amount the ring is rotated, LINEAR but the focusing speed is unaffected by the speed the ring is rotated. The Setup Menus F CONSTANT SPEED FOCUS (Fn) Choose the rate at which the focus distance changes when adjusted using function buttons during manual focus with compatible power zoom lenses. The higher the number, the higher the rate. Options 1(SLOW) 9 294 2 3 4 5 6 7 8(FAST) BUTTON/DIAL SETTING CONSTANT SPEED ZOOM (Fn) Choose the rate at which compatible power zoom lenses can be zoomed in or out using function buttons. The higher the number, the higher the rate. Options 1(SLOW) 2 3 4 5 6 7 8(FAST) CONSTANT SPEED ZOOM/FOCUS (Fn) OPERATION Choose whether the function buttons on compatible power zoom lenses need only be pressed once to start and stop power focus or power zoom. Option START/STOP SWITCH ACTIVE WHILE PRESSING Description The operation starts when the button is pressed and stops when it is pressed a second time. The operation continues while the button is pressed and stops when the button is released. Options X CW (clockwise) Y CCW (counterclockwise) ZOOM/FOCUS CONTROL RING Choose role played by the zoom/focus control ring on compatible power zoom lenses. Options ZOOM FOCUS 295 The Setup Menus ZOOM RING ROTATE Choose whether to reverse the rotation of the zoom ring on compatible power zoom lenses. 9 AE/AF-LOCK MODE This option determines the behavior of the button to which exposure and/or focus lock is assigned. Option Description AE&AF ON WHEN Exposure and/or focus will lock while the button is pressed. PRESSING AE&AF ON/OFF Exposure and/or focus will lock when the button is pressed and remain locked until it is pressed again. SWITCH AWB-LOCK MODE Choose the behavior of function buttons assigned auto white balance (AWB) lock. Auto white balance lock is used to lock white balance at the value metered by the camera when WA WHITE PRIORITY, AUTO, or AA AMBIENCE PRIORITY is selected for white balance. Option Description AWB ON WHEN Auto white balance locks while the button is pressed. PRESSING AWB ON/OFF Press the button once to lock auto white balance and again to end the lock. SWITCH The Setup Menus 9 296 BUTTON/DIAL SETTING a ISO BUTTON SETTING Choose the role performed by the ISO button during playback. Option Description Pressing the button marks the current picture for transfer. If the a SMARTPHONE camera is not currently paired with a smartphone, Bluetooth/ TRANSFER ORDER SMARTPHONE SETTING options will be displayed. Pressing the button displays a dialog where pictures can be d SELECT & selected for upload to a smartphone with which the camera SMARTPHONE is paired (P 237). If the camera is not currently paired with TRANSFER ORDER a smartphone, Bluetooth/SMARTPHONE SETTING options will be displayed instead (P 262). r WIRELESS The button can be used for wireless connections. COMMUNICATION The Setup Menus 9 297 TOUCH SCREEN SETTING Enable or disable touch-screen controls. x TOUCH SCREEN SETTING Option ON OFF Description The LCD monitor functions as a touch screen during shooting. Touch controls disabled. x DOUBLE TAP SETTING Option ON OFF Description Tap the LCD monitor twice to zoom in on your subject during shooting. Touch zoom disabled. c TOUCH FUNCTION Option ON OFF Description Enable touch-function gestures. Disable touch-function gestures. The Setup Menus TOUCH ZOOM Option ON OFF 9 298 Description If the lens supports touch zoom, you can zoom in and out by touching the LCD monitor (P 29). Touch zoom disabled. BUTTON/DIAL SETTING a TOUCH SCREEN SETTING Option ON OFF Description The LCD monitor functions as a touch screen during playback. Touch controls disabled. EVF TOUCH SCREEN AREA SETTINGS Select the area of the LCD monitor used for touch controls while the viewfinder is active. The area used for touch controls can be selected from: Option 6 0 2 4 1 3 5 OFF Description All. Right half. Top right quarter. Bottom right quarter. Left half. Top left quarter. Bottom left quarter. Touch controls disabled. The Setup Menus 9 299 BUTTON/DIAL SETTING LOCK Lock selected controls to prevent unintended operation. Option Description Choose from the following: • UNLOCK: Reset lock options. ALL FUNCTION: Lock all controls in the FUNCTION LOCK SETTING • SELECTION list. • SELECTED FUNCTION: Lock only the controls selected in the FUNCTION SELECTION list. FUNCTION SELECTION Choose the controls locked when SELECTED FUNCTION is chosen for LOCK SETTING. N The controls selected using SELECTED FUNCTION can be locked at any time during shooting by pressing and holding MENU/OK. To unlock the controls, press and hold the button again. The Setup Menus 9 300 POWER MANAGEMENT Adjust power management settings. To access power management settings, press MENU/OK, select the D (SET UP) tab, and choose POWER MANAGEMENT. POWER MANAGEMENT AUTO POWER OFF PERFORMANCE EVF/LCD BOOST SETTING AUTO POWER OFF TEMP. EXIT AUTO POWER OFF Choose the length of time before the camera turns off automatically when no operations are performed. Shorter times increase battery life; if OFF is selected, the camera must be turned off manually. Options 5 MIN 2 MIN 1 MIN 30 SEC 15 SEC OFF Option BOOST NORMAL ECONOMY Description Boost camera focus and viewfinder display performance. The battery drains faster than when is NORMAL selected. Choose for standard focus and viewfinder display performance and battery endurance. Limit autofocus and viewfinder performance. This option offers better battery endurance than does NORMAL. 301 The Setup Menus PERFORMANCE Select BOOST to improve focus and viewfinder display performance. 9 POWER MANAGEMENT EVF/LCD BOOST SETTING Adjust the behavior of the EVF and LCD monitor when BOOST is selected for PERFORMANCE. Option EVF/LCD LOW LIGHT PRIORITY EVF/LCD RESOLUTION PRIORITY EVF FRAME RATE PRIORITY (100P) Description Display brightness is adjusted to make subjects in shadows easier to see. Motion blur may cause ghosting. Display resolution is increased to make details easier to see. The refresh rate for the EVF is increased, smoothing motion. AUTO POWER OFF TEMP. If its temperature rises beyond a certain point, the camera will first display a message and then, if the temperature rise continues, automatically end shooting and power down. Choose the temperature at which the camera turns off automatically. Option STANDARD The Setup Menus HIGH 9 302 Description The camera turns off automatically when its temperature reaches the STANDARD value. Shooting can continue at temperatures higher than the STANDARD value, extending the time available to record movies and the like. Because remaining in contact with the camera at these high temperatures could result in low-temperature burns, this option should only be used after mounting the camera on a tripod or taking other steps to avoid prolonged contact with the camera. SAVE DATA SETTING Make changes to file management settings. To access file management settings, press MENU/OK, select the D (SET UP) tab, and choose SAVE DATA SET-UP. SAVE DATA SETTING FRAME NO. EDIT FILE NAME SELECT FOLDER COPYRIGHT INFO GEOTAGGING EXIT FRAME NO. Frame number New pictures are stored in image files named using a four-digit file number assigned by adding one to the last file number used. The File file number is displayed during playback as Directory number number shown. FRAME NO. controls whether file numbering is reset to 0001 when a new memory card is inserted or the current memory card is formatted. Option RENEW N • If the frame number reaches 999-9999, the shutter release will be disabled. Turn the camera off and insert a formatted memory card before resuming shooting. • Selecting D USER SETTING > RESET sets FRAME NO. to CONTINUOUS but does not reset the file number. • Frame numbers for pictures taken with other cameras may differ. 303 The Setup Menus CONTINUOUS Description Numbering continues from the last file number used or the first available file number, whichever is higher. Choose this option to reduce the number of pictures with duplicate file names. Numbering is reset to 0001 after formatting or when a new memory card is inserted. 9 EDIT FILE NAME Change the file name prefix. sRGB images use a four-letter prefix (default “DSCF”), Adobe RGB images a three-letter prefix (“DSF”) preceded by an underscore. Option sRGB AdobeRGB Default prefix DSCF _DSF Sample file name ABCD0001 _ABC0001 SELECT FOLDER Create folders and choose the folder used to store subsequent pictures. Option SELECT FOLDER CREATE FOLDER The Setup Menus 9 304 Description To choose the folder in which subsequent pictures will be stored, press the focus stick (focus lever) up or down to highlight an existing folder and press MENU/OK. Enter a five-character folder name. The new folder will be created with the next picture you take and subsequent pictures will be stored in that folder. SAVE DATA SETTING COPYRIGHT INFO Copyright information, in the form of Exif tags, can be added to new images as they are taken. Changes to copyright information are reflected only in images taken after the changes are made. Option Description DISP COPYRIGHT INFO View the current copyright information. ENTER AUTHOR’S INFO Enter the creator’s name. ENTER COPYRIGHT INFO Enter the name of the copyright holder. Delete the current copyright information. This change applies DELETE COPYRIGHT INFO only to images taken after this option is selected; copyright information recorded with existing images is not affected. GEOTAGGING If ON is selected, location data downloaded from a smartphone will be embedded in pictures as they are taken. Options ON OFF The Setup Menus 9 305 MEMO 306 Shortcuts 307 Shortcut Options Customize camera controls to suit your style or situation. Frequently-used options can be added to the Q menu or a custom “my” menu or assigned to a function button or touch-function gesture for direct access: Shortcut Option Description Add frequently-used options to this custom menu, “My menu” which can be viewed by pressing MENU/OK and selecting the E (“MY MENU”) tab. The Q menu is displayed by pressing the Q button. The Quick Menu Use the Q menu to view or change the options selected for frequently-used menu items. Use the function buttons for direct access to selectThe function buttons ed features. Use touch function button flick gestures (T-Fn1, Touch-function T-Fn2, T-Fn3, and T-Fn4) for direct access to selected gestures features. Use the function buttons on the lens (if any) for diLens function buttons rect access to selected features. Shortcuts 10 308 P 309 311 317 322 325 MY MENU Access a personalized menu of frequently-used options. To display “my menu”, press MENU/OK in the shooting display and select the E (MY MENU) tab. MY MENU SELF-TIMER INTERVAL TIMER SHOOTING FILM SIMULATION GRAIN EFFECT PHOTOMETRY SHUTTER TYPE IS MODE gFACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING EXIT O The E tab is only available if options have been assigned to MY MENU. MY MENU SETTING To choose the items listed in the E (MY MENU) tab: 1 In the setup menu, select D USER SETTING > x MY MENU SETTING or F MY MENU SETTING. MY MENU SETTING ADD ITEMS RANK ITEMS REMOVE ITEMS N To reorder items, select RANK ITEMS. To delete items, select REMOVE ITEMS. 2 MY MENU SETTING IMAGE SIZE IMAGE QUALITY RAW RECORDING SELECT JPEG/HEIF FILM SIMULATION MONOCHROMATIC COLOR GRAIN EFFECT COLOR CHROME EFFECT SELECT Shortcuts Press the focus stick (focus lever) up or down to highlight ADD ITEMS and press MENU/OK. Options that can be added to “my menu” are highlighted in blue. CANCEL 10 N Items currently in “my menu” are indicated by check marks. 309 MY MENU 3 Choose a position for the item and press MENU/OK. The item will be added to “my menu”. SELECT ITEM LOCATION 1 IMAGE SIZE 2 IMAGE QUALITY MOVE 4 5 SAVE Press MENU/OK to return to the edit display. Repeat Steps 3 and 4 until all the desired items have been added. N “My menu” can contain up to 16 items. Shortcuts 10 310 The Quick Menu Use the quick menu for quick access to selected options. To view the quick menu, press the Q button. The Quick Menu Display The quick menu offers different options in photo and movie modes. At default settings, it contains the following items: Still photography SHOOTING MODE PROGRAM AE SET F IMAGE SIZE G IMAGE QUALITY H FILM SIMULATION Default I HIGHLIGHT TONE J SHADOW TONE K COLOR L SHARPNESS M SELF-TIMER g FACE/EYE DETECTION N SETTING O SUBJECT DETECTION SETTING P EVF/LCD BRIGHTNESS The quick menu shows the options currently selected for items B–P, which can be changed. 311 Shortcuts A SHOOTING MODE B FOCUS MODE C AF MODE D DYNAMIC RANGE E HIGH ISO NR LONG PRESS EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM 10 Movie recording SHOOTING MODE PROGRAM AE SET LONG PRESS EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM A SHOOTING MODE B S.S. (MOVIE OPTIMIZED CONTROL oL) C MOVIE MODE RESOLUTION/ ASPECT RATIO D F WHITE BALANCE Default E F FILM SIMULATION F ISO (MOVIE OPTIMIZED CONTROL oL) G MOVIE MODE FRAME RATE H F WHITE BALANCE COLOR TEMP. (WHEN k SELECTED) The quick menu shows the options currently selected for items B–H, which can be changed. Shortcuts 10 312 The Quick Menu Viewing and Changing Settings 1 Press Q to display the quick menu during shooting. 2 Use the focus stick (focus lever) to highlight items and rotate the rear command dial to change. SHOOTING MODE PROGRAM AE SET LONG PRESS EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM N To jump to the x EDIT/SAVE CUSTOM SETTING or F EDIT/ SAVE CUSTOM SETTING menu, press and hold the Q button when the quick menu is displayed. 3 Press Q to exit when settings are complete. can assign the Q button roles normally reserved for the function buttons or assign the Q button’s default role to a function button (P 317). • To disable the Q (quick menu) button, select NONE for D BUTTON/ DIAL SETTING > FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING > Q BUTTON SETTING. 313 Shortcuts N • The quick menu can also be edited using touch controls. • Using D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING, you 10 Editing the Quick Menu To choose the items displayed in the quick menu: 1 Press and hold the Q button during shooting. N Whether the camera displays the photo or movie quick menu depends on the position of the mode dial. 2 The current quick menu will be displayed; use the focus stick (focus lever) to highlight the item you wish to change and press MENU/OK. 3 Highlight the item you wish to change and press MENU/OK. The following can be assigned to the quick menu. N The quick menus can also be edited using D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > x EDIT/SAVE QUICK MENU or F EDIT/SAVE QUICK MENU. Shortcuts 10 314 The Quick Menu Available Items (Still Photography) Choose from: • IMAGE SIZE • IMAGE QUALITY • FILM SIMULATION • GRAIN EFFECT • COLOR CHROME EFFECT • COLOR CHROME FX BLUE • DYNAMIC RANGE • D RANGE PRIORITY • WHITE BALANCE • WHITE BALANCE COLOR TEMP. • MF ASSIST • TOUCH SCREEN MODE • SELF-TIMER • PHOTOMETRY • SHUTTER TYPE • FLICKER REDUCTION • ISO • FLASH FUNCTION SETTING • FLASH COMPENSATION • MOVIE MODE RESOLUTION/ASPECT • HIGHLIGHT TONE • SHADOW TONE • COLOR • SHARPNESS • CLARITY • HIGH ISO NR • FOCUS MODE • AF MODE • AF-C CUSTOM SETTINGS • g FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING • SUBJECT DETECTION SETTING • MOVIE MODE FRAME RATE • BIT RATE • HIGH SPEED REC • F IS MODE • F IS MODE BOOST • INTERNAL/EXTERNAL MIC LEVEL (WHEN k SELECTED) RATIO ADJUSTMENT • SOUND & FLASH • EVF/LCD BRIGHTNESS • EVF/LCD COLOR • NONE N To disable the function button, choose NONE. Shortcuts 10 315 The Quick Menu Available Items (Movies) • FILM SIMULATION • DYNAMIC RANGE • F WHITE BALANCE • F WHITE BALANCE COLOR TEMP. (WHEN k SELECTED) • HIGHLIGHT TONE • SHADOW TONE • COLOR • SHARPNESS • HIGH ISO NR • PRODUCT PRIORITY MODE • g FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING • SUBJECT DETECTION SETTING • MF ASSIST • TOUCH SCREEN MODE • PHOTOMETRY • MOVIE ISO • MOVIE MODE RESOLUTION/ASPECT RATIO • MOVIE MODE FRAME RATE • BIT RATE • HIGH SPEED REC • F SELF-TIMER • BACKGROUND DEFOCUS MODE • FOCUS MODE • MOVIE AF MODE • FIX MOVIE CROP MAGNIFICATION • F IS MODE • F IS MODE BOOST • SHUTTER SPEED • APERTURE (MOVIE OPTIMIZED CONTROL oL) • INTERNAL/EXTERNAL MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT • SOUND & FLASH • EVF/LCD BRIGHTNESS • EVF/LCD COLOR • NONE N To disable the function button, choose NONE. Shortcuts 10 316 Function Controls Assign roles to the function buttons, function dial, or touch-function gestures for quick access to the selected features. The Function Buttons Assign a role to the function buttons for quick access to the selected feature. Function Button Defaults The default assignments are: Shortcuts Function buttons A t (movie recording) button B ISO button C Q (quick menu) button D Fn button E AEL (exposure lock) button F AFON button Default MOVIE RECORDING RELEASE ISO QUICK MENU WHITE BALANCE AE LOCK ONLY AF-ON 10 317 Assigning Roles to the Function Buttons Pressing and holding the DISP/BACK button displays a dialog where you can choose the roles assigned to the function buttons. 1 Press and hold the DISP/BACK button until a control selection menu is displayed. N You can also assign roles to function buttons using D BUTTON/ DIAL SETTING > FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING. 2 3 Highlight the desired control and press MENU/OK. Highlight any of the following options and press MENU/OK to assign it to the selected control. Roles That Can Be Assigned to the Function Buttons Choose from: Shortcuts 10 • d WHEN SET TO B (ON/OFF SWITCH) • IMAGE SIZE • IMAGE QUALITY • RAW • FILM SIMULATION • GRAIN EFFECT • COLOR CHROME EFFECT • COLOR CHROME FX BLUE • DYNAMIC RANGE • D RANGE PRIORITY • WHITE BALANCE • CLARITY • RECALL CUSTOM 1 SETTING • FOCUS AREA • FOCUS CHECK 318 • FOCUS MODE • AF MODE • AF-C CUSTOM SETTINGS • FACE DETECTION ON/OFF • RIGHT/LEFT EYE SWITCH • SUBJECT DETECTION ON/OFF • AF RANGE LIMITER • FOCUS CHECK LOCK • SPORTS FINDER MODE • PRE-SHOT sJ • SELF-TIMER • AE BKT SETTING • FOCUS BKT SETTING • PHOTOMETRY • SHUTTER TYPE Function Controls • FLICKER REDUCTION • FLICKERLESS S.S. SETTING • ISO • IS MODE • WIRELESS COMMUNICATION • FLASH COMPENSATION • FLASH FUNCTION SETTING • TTL-LOCK • MODELING FLASH • MOVIE RECORDING RELEASE • HIGH SPEED REC • F SELF-TIMER • BACKGROUND DEFOCUS MODE • FIX MOVIE CROP MAGNIFICATION • F IS MODE BOOST • PRODUCT PRIORITY MODE • ZEBRA SETTING • COOLING FAN SETTING • INTERNAL/EXTERNAL MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT • 4ch AUDIO PLAYBACK • MOVIE OPTIMIZED CONTROL oL • VIEW MODE SETTING • PREVIEW DEPTH OF FIELD • PREVIEW EXP./WB IN MANUAL MODE • NATURAL LIVE VIEW • HISTOGRAM • ELECTRONIC LEVEL SWITCH • LARGE INDICATORS MODE • F-Log VIEW ASSIST • COMMAND DIAL LOCK • ZOOM/FOCUS CONTROL RING • CONSTANT SPEED ZOOM (T) • CONSTANT SPEED ZOOM (W) • F CONSTANT SPEED FOCUS (N) • F CONSTANT SPEED FOCUS (F) • AE LOCK ONLY • AF LOCK ONLY • AE/AF LOCK • AF-ON • AWB LOCK ONLY • LOCK SETTING • PERFORMANCE • AUTO IMAGE TRANSFER ORDER • Bluetooth ON/OFF • QUICK MENU • PLAYBACK • NONE N To disable the function button, choose NONE. Shortcuts 10 319 AF-ON Controls to which AF-ON is assigned can be used for autofocus. MODELING FLASH If MODELING FLASH is selected when a compatible shoe-mounted flash unit is attached, you can press the control to test-fire the flash and check for shadows and the like (modeling flash). TTL-LOCK If TTL-LOCK is selected, you can press the control to lock flash output according to the option selected for F FLASH SETTING > TTL-LOCK MODE (P 179). RECALL CUSTOM 1 SETTING Controls to which RECALL CUSTOM 1 SETTING has been assigned can be pressed to temporarily recall the settings saved to C1 (CUSTOM 1). Pressing the button a second time restores the previous settings. The Function Dial Rotate the Fn (function) dial for direct access to selected features. Shortcuts 10 320 Function Controls The role played by the function dial can be selected using D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING. • EXPO. COMP. • SHUTTER TYPE • IMAGE SIZE • FLICKER REDUCTION • IMAGE QUALITY • FLICKERLESS S.S. SETTING • FILM SIMULATION • ISO • GRAIN EFFECT • IS MODE • COLOR CHROME EFFECT • FLASH COMPENSATION • COLOR CHROME FX BLUE • FLASH FUNCTION SETTING • DYNAMIC RANGE • HIGH SPEED REC • D RANGE PRIORITY • F SELF-TIMER • WHITE BALANCE • BACKGROUND DEFOCUS MODE • CLARITY • FIX MOVIE CROP MAGNIFICATION • FOCUS MODE • F IS MODE BOOST • AF MODE • PRODUCT PRIORITY MODE • AF-C CUSTOM SETTINGS • ZEBRA SETTING • FACE DETECTION ON/OFF • INTERNAL/EXTERNAL MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT • AF RANGE LIMITER • SPORTS FINDER MODE • MOVIE OPTIMIZED CONTROL oL • PRE-SHOT sJ • DEFAULT • SELF-TIMER • DEFAULT (d WHEN SET TO B) • PHOTOMETRY • NONE N • To disable the function dial, select NONE. • If DEFAULT is selected, the role played by the function dial will be tailored to the mode currently chosen with the mode dial (P 7). signed EXPO. COMP. instead of FILM SIMULATION when an AUTO option is selected for ISO sensitivity in mode M (manual). Shortcuts • If DEFAULT (d WHEN SET TO B) is selected, the control will be as- 10 321 Touch-Function Gestures Assign roles to touch-function gestures (T-Fn1, T-Fn2, T-Fn3, or T-Fn4) for quick access to selected features. N Touch-function gestures are disabled by default. To enable touch-func- tion gestures, select ON for D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > TOUCH SCREEN SETTING > c TOUCH FUNCTION. Touch-Function Gesture Defaults The default assignments for the different gestures are: Shortcuts Touch-Function Gestures A T-Fn1 (flick up) B T-Fn2 (flick left) C T-Fn3 (flick right) D T-Fn4 (flick down) 10 322 Default HISTOGRAM PREVIEW DEPTH OF FIELD LARGE INDICATORS MODE ZEBRA SETTING Function Controls Assigning Roles to Touch Function Gestures Pressing and holding the DISP/BACK button displays a dialog where you can choose the roles assigned to touch function gestures. 1 Press and hold the DISP/BACK button until a control selection menu is displayed. N Button assignments can also be selected using D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING. 2 3 Highlight a touch function gesture and press MENU/OK. Highlight any of the following options and press MENU/OK to assign it to the selected control. Shortcuts 10 323 Roles That Can Be Assigned to Touch Function Gestures Choose from: Shortcuts 10 • IMAGE SIZE • IMAGE QUALITY • RAW • FILM SIMULATION • GRAIN EFFECT • COLOR CHROME EFFECT • COLOR CHROME FX BLUE • DYNAMIC RANGE • D RANGE PRIORITY • WHITE BALANCE • CLARITY • RECALL CUSTOM 1 SETTING • FOCUS AREA • FOCUS CHECK • FOCUS MODE • AF MODE • AF-C CUSTOM SETTINGS • FACE DETECTION ON/OFF • RIGHT/LEFT EYE SWITCH • SUBJECT DETECTION ON/OFF • AF RANGE LIMITER • FOCUS CHECK LOCK • SPORTS FINDER MODE • PRE-SHOT sJ • SELF-TIMER • AE BKT SETTING • FOCUS BKT SETTING • PHOTOMETRY • SHUTTER TYPE • FLICKER REDUCTION • FLICKERLESS S.S. SETTING 324 • ISO • IS MODE • WIRELESS COMMUNICATION • FLASH COMPENSATION • FLASH FUNCTION SETTING • TTL-LOCK • MODELING FLASH • HIGH SPEED REC • F SELF-TIMER • BACKGROUND DEFOCUS MODE • FIX MOVIE CROP MAGNIFICATION • F IS MODE BOOST • PRODUCT PRIORITY MODE • ZEBRA SETTING • COOLING FAN SETTING • INTERNAL/EXTERNAL MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT • 4ch AUDIO PLAYBACK • MOVIE OPTIMIZED CONTROL oL • VIEW MODE SETTING • PREVIEW DEPTH OF FIELD • PREVIEW EXP./WB IN MANUAL MODE • NATURAL LIVE VIEW • HISTOGRAM • ELECTRONIC LEVEL SWITCH • LARGE INDICATORS MODE • F-Log VIEW ASSIST • COMMAND DIAL LOCK • ZOOM/FOCUS CONTROL RING • LOCK SETTING • PERFORMANCE Function Controls • AUTO IMAGE TRANSFER ORDER • Bluetooth ON/OFF • QUICK MENU • PLAYBACK • NONE N To disable touch-function gestures, choose NONE. Lens Function Buttons Choose the roles played by the function buttons on the lens (where applicable). Lens Function Button Defaults The default assignments are: N A XF18-120mmF4 LM PZ WR lens is used here for illustrative purposes. Shortcuts Lens function button Default ZOOM/FOCUS CONTROL RING A Z/F CONSTANT SPEED ZOOM (T) B L-Fn1 (rocker zoom button pressed up) C L-Fn2 (rocker zoom button pressed down) CONSTANT SPEED ZOOM (W) 10 325 Assigning Roles to the Lens Function Buttons The roles played by the lens function buttons can be selected using the D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > POWER ZOOM LENS FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING option in the setup menu. Shortcuts 10 • d WHEN SET TO B (ON/OFF SWITCH) • IMAGE SIZE • IMAGE QUALITY • RAW • FILM SIMULATION • GRAIN EFFECT • COLOR CHROME EFFECT • COLOR CHROME FX BLUE • DYNAMIC RANGE • D RANGE PRIORITY • WHITE BALANCE • CLARITY • RECALL CUSTOM 1 SETTING • FOCUS AREA • FOCUS CHECK • FOCUS MODE • AF MODE • AF-C CUSTOM SETTINGS • FACE DETECTION ON/OFF • RIGHT/LEFT EYE SWITCH • SUBJECT DETECTION ON/OFF • AF RANGE LIMITER • FOCUS CHECK LOCK • SPORTS FINDER MODE • PRE-SHOT sJ • SELF-TIMER • AE BKT SETTING • FOCUS BKT SETTING • PHOTOMETRY • SHUTTER TYPE 326 • FLICKER REDUCTION • FLICKERLESS S.S. SETTING • ISO • IS MODE • WIRELESS COMMUNICATION • FLASH COMPENSATION • FLASH FUNCTION SETTING • TTL-LOCK • MODELING FLASH • MOVIE RECORDING RELEASE • HIGH SPEED REC • F SELF-TIMER • BACKGROUND DEFOCUS MODE • FIX MOVIE CROP MAGNIFICATION • F IS MODE BOOST • PRODUCT PRIORITY MODE • ZEBRA SETTING • COOLING FAN SETTING • INTERNAL/EXTERNAL MIC LEVEL ADJUSTMENT • 4ch AUDIO PLAYBACK • MOVIE OPTIMIZED CONTROL oL • VIEW MODE SETTING • PREVIEW DEPTH OF FIELD • PREVIEW EXP./WB IN MANUAL MODE • NATURAL LIVE VIEW • HISTOGRAM • ELECTRONIC LEVEL SWITCH • LARGE INDICATORS MODE • F-Log VIEW ASSIST Function Controls • COMMAND DIAL LOCK • AF-ON • ZOOM/FOCUS CONTROL RING • AWB LOCK ONLY • CONSTANT SPEED ZOOM (T) • LOCK SETTING • CONSTANT SPEED ZOOM (W) • PERFORMANCE • F CONSTANT SPEED FOCUS (N) • AUTO IMAGE TRANSFER ORDER • F CONSTANT SPEED FOCUS (F) • Bluetooth ON/OFF • AE LOCK ONLY • QUICK MENU • AF LOCK ONLY • PLAYBACK • AE/AF LOCK • NONE N • To disable the function button, choose NONE. • Selected function lock is not available when CONSTANT SPEED ZOOM (T) or CONSTANT SPEED ZOOM (W) is assigned to a lens function button (P 300). Shortcuts 10 327 MEMO 328 Peripherals and Optional Accessories 329 Lenses The camera can be used with lenses for the FUJIFILM X-mount. Lens Parts Peripherals and Optional Accessories A Lens hood B Mounting marks C Focus ring D Zoom ring E Aperture ring F O.I.S. switch G Aperture mode switch H Lens signal contacts I Front lens cap J Rear lens cap N A XF18-55mmF2.8-4 R LM OIS lens is used here for illustrative purposes. 11 330 Lenses Lens Care • Use a blower to remove dust, then gently wipe with a soft, dry cloth. Any remaining stains can be removed by wiping gently with a piece of Fujifilm lens-cleaning paper to which a small amount of lens-cleaning fluid has been applied. • Replace the front and rear caps when the lens is not in use. Removing Lens Caps Remove lens caps as shown. Peripherals and Optional Accessories O Lens caps may differ from those shown. 11 331 Attaching Lens Hoods When attached, lens hoods reduce glare and protect the front lens element. Peripherals and Optional Accessories 11 332 Lenses Lenses with Aperture Rings At settings other than A, you can adjust aperture by rotating the lens aperture ring (exposure modes A and M). A 16 11 8 5.6 4 2.8 A 16 11 8 5.6 4 Aperture ring N • Selecting ON for MOVIE OPTIMIZED CONTROL oL disables the aperture ring. • When the aperture ring is set to A, rotate the command dials to adjust aperture. The Aperture Mode Switch If the lens has an aperture mode switch, aperture can be adjusted manually by sliding the switch to Z and rotating the aperture ring. Peripherals and Optional Accessories Aperture ring Aperture mode switch 11 333 Lenses with No Aperture Rings Aperture can be adjusted using the front command dial in modes A (aperture-priority AE) and M (manual). N Aperture control can be reassigned to the rear command dial using D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > COMMAND DIAL SETTING. Lenses with O.I.S. Switches If the lens supports optical image stabilization (O.I.S.), the image stabilization mode can be chosen in the camera menus. To activate image stabilization, slide the O.I.S. switch to ON. O.I.S. switch Peripherals and Optional Accessories 11 334 Lenses Manual Focus Lenses Slide the focus ring to the front for autofocus. For manual focus, slide the focus ring to the back and rotate it while checking the results in the camera display. The focus distance and depth-of-field indicators can be used to assist manual focus. O Note that manual focus may not be available in all shooting modes. Peripherals and Optional Accessories The Depth-of-Field Indicator The depth-of-field indicator shows the approximate depth of field (the distance in front of and behind the focus point that appears to be in focus). The indicator is displayed in film format. 11 335 Lenses Power Zoom Lenses Zoom can be adjusted on power zoom lenses using the zoom/ focus control ring, zoom button, or zoom ring. O Adjusting zoom while the lens is wet makes it easier for water to find its way inside the lens. Wipe any water from the lens before adjusting zoom. N A XF18-120mmF4 LM PZ WR lens is used here for illustrative purposes. Control A Zoom ring Peripherals and Optional Accessories 11 Description Rotate the zoom ring to zoom in or out manually. Rotate the zoom/focus control ring to zoom in or out B Zoom/focus control ring using powered zoom. The zoom speed is proportional to the speed with which the ring is rotated. Switch the role of zoom/focus control ring from focus C Z/F (zoom/focus) button to zoom or vice versa. Press a zoom button to zoom in or out at a steady speed using powered zoom. Zoom ends when the D Zoom buttons button is pressed a second time. N • The Z/F and zoom buttons can be assigned other roles using D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > POWER ZOOM LENS FUNCTION (Fn) SETTING. • The speed at which zoom can be adjusted via the zoom buttons can be chosen using D BUTTON/DIAL SETTING > LENS ZOOM/FOCUS SETTING. 336 External Flash Units Use optional external flash units for flash photography. Some units support high-speed sync (FP) and can be used at shutter speeds faster than the flash sync speed, while others can function as commanders controlling remote units via optical wireless flash control. O You may be unable to test-fire the flash in some circumstances, for example when a setup menu is displayed on the camera. Peripherals and Optional Accessories Red-Eye Removal Red-eye removal is available when FLASH is selected for F FLASH SETTING > RED EYE REMOVAL. Red-eye removal minimizes “red-eye” caused when light from the flash is reflected from the subject’s retinas. Flash Sync Speed The flash will synchronize with the shutter at shutter speeds of 1⁄180 s or slower. Optional Flash Units from Fujifilm The camera can be used with optional Fujifilm shoe-mounted flash units. Third-Party Flash Units Do not use third-party flash units that apply over 300 V to the camera hot shoe. 11 337 Using an External Flash 1 2 Connect the unit to the camera. In shooting mode, select FLASH FUNCTION SETTING in the F (FLASH SETTING) menu tab. The options available vary with the flash unit. FLASH SETTING FLASH FUNCTION SETTING RED EYE REMOVAL TTL-LOCK MODE LED LIGHT SETTING COMMANDER SETTING CH SETTING EXIT Menu Description Built-In Flash Displayed when the built-in flash is raised. Sync terminal options will be displayed if the built-in flash SYNC is lowered and either no flash unit, or an incompatible TERMINAL flash unit, is mounted on the hot shoe. SHOE MOUNT Displayed when an optional flash unit other than the FLASH EF-X8 is mounted on the hot shoe and turned on. Displayed if an optional flash unit functioning as a comCOMMANDER mander for Fujifilm optical wireless remote flash control is (OPTICAL) connected and turned on. Peripherals and Optional Accessories 3 Highlight items using the focus stick (focus lever) and rotate the rear command dial to change the highlighted setting. Press DISP/BACK to put the changes into effect. 11 338 339 340 343 MODE Built-In Flash ADJUST 4 P 123 END External Flash Units SYNC TERMINAL SYNC TERMINAL is displayed if the built-in flash is lowered and either no flash unit, or an incompatible flash unit, is mounted on the hot shoe. MODE SYNC TERMINAL ADJUST END Setting Peripherals and Optional Accessories Description Choose from the following options: • M: A trigger signal is transmitted via the hot shoe X contacts when a picture is taken. Choose a shutter speed slower than A Flash control mode the sync speed; even slower speeds may be required if the unit uses long flashes or has a slow response time. • D (OFF): The trigger signal is disabled. Choose whether the flash is timed to fire immediately after the shutter opens (H/1ST CURTAIN) or immediately before B Sync it closes (I/2ND CURTAIN). 1ST CURTAIN is recommended in most circumstances. 11 339 SHOE MOUNT FLASH The following options are available when an optional shoe-mounted flash unit is attached and turned on. MODE SHOE MOUNT FLASH ADJUST Setting END Peripherals and Optional Accessories Description The flash control mode selected with the flash unit. This can in some cases be adjusted from the camera; the options available vary with the flash. • TTL: TTL mode. Adjust flash compensation (B). • M: The flash fires at the selected output regardless of subject A Flash control mode brightness or camera settings. Output in some cases can be adjusted from the camera (B). • MULTI: Repeating flash. Compatible shoe-mounted flash units will fire multiple times with each shot. • D (OFF): The flash does not fire. Some flash units can be turned off from the camera. 11 340 External Flash Units Setting Peripherals and Optional Accessories Description The options available vary with flash control mode. • TTL: Adjust flash compensation (the full value may not be applied if the limits of the flash control system are exceeded). In the cases of the EF-X20, EF-20, and EF-42, the selected value is added to the value selected with the flash unit. B Flash compensation/ • M/MULTI: Adjust flash output (compatible units only). output Choose from values expressed as fractions of full power, from ⁄ (mode M) or ¼ (MULTI) down to ⁄ in increments equivalent to ⁄ EV. The desired results may not be achieved at low values if they exceed the limits of the flash control system; take a test shot and check the results. Choose a flash mode for TTL flash control. The options available vary with the shooting mode (P, S, A, or M) selected. • E (FLASH AUTO): The flash fires only as required; flash level is adjusted according to subject brightness. A p icon displayed when the shutter button is pressed halfway indicates that the flash will fire when the photo is taken. F (STANDARD): The flash fires with every shot if possible; • C Flash mode (TTL) flash level is adjusted according to subject brightness. The flash will not fire if not fully charged when the shutter is released. • G (SLOW SYNC.): Combine the flash with slow shutter speeds when photographing portrait subjects against a backdrop of night scenery. The flash will not fire if not fully charged when the shutter is released. 11 341 Setting D Sync E Zoom F Lighting Peripherals and Optional Accessories G LED light G Number of flashes * H Frequency * Description Control flash timing. • H (1ST CURTAIN): The flash fires immediately after the shutter opens (generally the best choice). • I (2ND CURTAIN): The flash fires immediately before the shutter closes. • R (AUTO FP(HSS)): High-speed sync (compatible units only). The camera automatically engages front-curtain highspeed sync at shutter speeds faster than the flash sync speed. Equivalent to 1ST CURTAIN when MULTI is selected for flash control mode. The angle of illumination (flash coverage) for units that support flash zoom. Some units allow the adjustment to be made from the camera. If AUTO is selected, zoom will automatically be adjusted to match coverage to lens focal length. If the unit supports this feature, choose from: • J (FLASH POWER PRIORITY): Gain range by slightly reducing coverage. • K (STANDARD): Match coverage to picture angle. • L (EVEN COVERAGE PRIORITY): Slightly increase coverage for more even lighting. Choose how the built-in LED light functions during still photography (compatible units only): as a catchlight (M/CATCHLIGHT), as an AF-assist illuminator (N/AF ASSIST), or as both a catchlight and an AF-assist illuminator (O/AF ASSIST+CATCHLIGHT). Choose OFF to disable the LED during photography. Choose the number of times the flash fires each time the shutter is released in MULTI mode. Choose the frequency at which the flash fires in MULTI mode. * Full value may not be applied if limits of flash control system are exceeded. 11 342 External Flash Units COMMANDER(OPTICAL) The options will be displayed if the unit is currently functioning as a commander for Fujifilm optical wireless remote flash control. MODE COMMANDER(OPTICAL) ADJUST END B Peripherals and Optional Accessories Fujifilm optical wireless remote flash control offers a choice of four channels (Channels 1 through 4) for the exchange of optical signals between the commander and remote flash units. Separate channels can be used for different flash systems or to prevent interference when multiple systems are operating in close proximity. The flash units can also be placed in up to three groups (A, B, and C) and flash mode C and flash level adjusted separately for A each group. 11 343 Setting A Flash control mode (group A) B Flash control mode (group B) C Flash control mode (group C) D Flash compensation/ output (group A) Peripherals and Optional Accessories E Flash compensation/ output (group B) F Flash compensation/ output (group C) 11 344 Description Choose flash control modes for groups A, B, and C. TTL% is available for groups A and B only. • TTL: The units in the group fire in TTL mode. Flash compensation can be adjusted separately for each group. • TTL%: If TTL% is selected for either group A or B, you can specify the output of the selected group as a percentage of the other and adjust overall flash compensation for both groups. • M: In mode M, the units in the group fire at the selected output (expressed as a fraction of full power) regardless of subject brightness or camera settings. • MULTI: Choosing MULTI for any group sets all the units in all groups to repeating flash mode. All units will fire multiple times with each shot. • D (OFF): If OFF is selected, the units in the group will not fire. Adjust flash level for the selected group according to option selected for flash control mode. Note that the full value may not be applied if the limits of the flash control system are exceeded. • TTL: Adjust flash compensation. • M/MULTI: Adjust flash output. • TTL%: Choose the balance between groups A and B and adjust overall flash compensation. External Flash Units Setting G Flash mode (TTL) I Zoom J Lighting 345 Peripherals and Optional Accessories H Sync Description Choose a flash mode for TTL flash control. The options available vary with the shooting mode (P, S, A, or M) selected. • E (FLASH AUTO): The flash fires only as required; flash level is adjusted according to subject brightness. A p icon displayed when the shutter button is pressed halfway indicates that the flash will fire when the photo is taken. • F (STANDARD): The flash fires with every shot if possible; flash level is adjusted according to subject brightness. The flash will not fire if not fully charged when the shutter is released. • G (SLOW SYNC.): Combine the flash with slow shutter speeds when photographing portrait subjects against a backdrop of night scenery. The flash will not fire if not fully charged when the shutter is released. Control flash timing. • H (1ST CURTAIN): The flash fires immediately after the shutter opens (generally the best choice). • I (2ND CURTAIN): The flash fires immediately before the shutter closes. • R (AUTO FP(HSS)): High-speed sync (compatible units only). The camera automatically engages front-curtain highspeed sync at shutter speeds faster than the flash sync speed. Equivalent to 1ST CURTAIN when MULTI is selected for flash control mode. The angle of illumination (flash coverage) for units that support flash zoom. Some units allow the adjustment to be made from the camera. If AUTO is selected, zoom will automatically be adjusted to match coverage to lens focal length. If the unit supports this feature, choose from: • J (FLASH POWER PRIORITY): Gain range by slightly reducing coverage. • K (STANDARD): Match coverage to picture angle. • L (EVEN COVERAGE PRIORITY): Slightly increase coverage for more even lighting. 11 External Flash Units Setting K Commander K Number of flashes L Channel L Frequency Peripherals and Optional Accessories 11 346 Description Choose the group for units functioning as a commander for Fujifilm optical wireless remote flash control in TTL, TTL%, or M mode. This option is available only with clipon flash units that support Fujifilm optical wireless remote flash control. • Gr A: Assign the commander to group A. • Gr B: Assign the commander to group B. • Gr C: Assign the commander to group C. • OFF: Output from the commander is held to a level that does not affect the final picture. Choose the number of times the flash fires each time the shutter is released in MULTI mode. Choose the channel used by the commander for communication with the remote flash units. Separate channels can be used for different flash systems or to prevent interference when multiple systems are operating in close proximity. Choose the frequency at which the flash fires in MULTI mode. Cooling Fans Cooling fans help keep the camera cool, allowing longer periods of non-stop movie recording. Attaching a Cooling Fan Open the monitor and attach an FAN-001 cooling fan. O Turn the camera off before attaching or removing the fan. Open the monitor. 2 Remove the camera cooling fan connector cover and the fan connector cap. After removing the cooling fan connector cover (A), attach it to the fan for safe-keeping. Keep the fan connector cap (B) in a safe place. (B) (A) (A) 347 Peripherals and Optional Accessories 1 11 Cooling Fans 3 Place the fan on the camera, making sure the screws and connectors are correctly aligned. 4 Tighten the screws. Peripherals and Optional Accessories Using the Fan Fan speed can be adjusted using the A SHOOTING SETTING > xF COOLING FAN SETTING and B MOVIE SETTING > xF COOLING FAN SETTING options in the photo and movie menus, respectively. Select OFF to turn the fan off. 11 O At some speeds, the noise of the fan may be audible in movies record- N The cooling fan may fall off if the screws are not sufficiently tightened. ed with the camera. 348 Technical Notes 349 Accessories from Fujifilm The following optional accessories are available from Fujifilm. For the latest information on the accessories available in your region, check with your local Fujifilm representative or visit https://fujifilm-x.com/support/compatibility/cameras/. Rechargeable Li-ion batteries NP-W235: Additional high-capacity NP-W235 rechargeable batteries can be purchased as required. Dual battery chargers BC-W235: The BC-W235 can charge up to two NP-W235 batteries at a time. At +25 °C/+77 °F, the batteries will charge in about 200 minutes. Using a device that supplies power with an outputs of 30 W or above reduces charging times to as little as 150 minutes. Remote releases RR-100: Use to reduce camera shake. A third-party adapter that converts a female three-pin, ⌀2.5 mm connector to a male three-pin, ⌀3.5 mm connector is required for connection to the camera. Stereo microphones MIC-ST1: An external microphone for movie recording. FUJINON lenses XF-/XC-series lenses: Interchangeable lenses for use exclusively with the FUJIFILM X-mount. FUJINON MKX-series lenses: Cinema lenses for the FUJIFILM X-mount. Macro extension tubes MCEX-11/16: Attach between the camera and the lens to shoot at high reproduction ratios. Technical Notes 12 Teleconverters XF1.4X TC WR: Increases the focal length of the compatible lenses by about 1.4×. XF2X TC WR: Increases the focal length of the compatible lenses by about 2.0×. Mount adapters FUJIFILM M MOUNT ADAPTER: Allows the camera to be used with a wide selection of M-mount lenses. 350 Accessories from Fujifilm Body caps BCP-001: Cover the camera lens mount when no lens is attached. Shoe-mounted flash units EF-X500: In addition to manual and TTL flash control, this clip-on flash unit has a Guide Number of 50/164 (ISO 100, m/ft.) and supports FP (high-speed sync), allowing it to be used at shutter speeds that exceed the flash sync speed. Featuring support for the optional EF-BP1 battery pack and Fujifilm optical wireless flash control, it can be used as a commander or remote flash unit for remote wireless flash photography. EF-BP1: A battery pack for EF-X500 flash units. Takes up to 8 AA batteries. EF-60: In addition to manual and TTL flash control, this clip-on flash unit has a Guide Number of 60/197 (ISO 100, m/ft.) and supports FP (high-speed sync), allowing it to be used at shutter speeds that exceed the flash sync speed. It can also be used as remote flash under the control of an optional EF-W1 wireless commander. EF-W1: With support for the NAS * wireless communication standard developed by Nissin Japan, this wireless flash commander can be used with optional EF-60 clip-on flash units and other NAS-compliant units. * NAS is a registered trademark of Nissin Japan Ltd. EF-42: This clip-on flash unit has a Guide Number of 42/137 (ISO 100, m/ft.) and supports manual and TTL flash control. EF-X20: This clip-on flash unit has a Guide Number of 20/65 (ISO 100, m/ft.) and supports manual and TTL flash control. EF-20: This clip-on flash unit has a Guide Number of 20/65 (ISO 100, m/ft.) and supports TTL flash control (manual flash control is not supported). Cooling fans FAN-001: See “Cooling Fans” (P 347). Grip belts GB-001: Improves grip. Combine with a hand grip for more secure handling. instax SHARE printers SP-1/SP-2/SP-3: Connect via wireless LAN to print pictures on instax film. Technical Notes Tripod grips TG-BT1: Record movies, take photographs, or adjust zoom on compatible power zoom lenses while holding this Bluetooth tripod grip. 12 351 Software for Use with Your Camera The camera can be used with the following software. For the latest information on software available from Fujifilm, visit https://fujifilm-x.com/support/compatibility/cameras/. Smartphone Apps Establish a wireless connection between your camera and a smartphone or tablet. https://app.fujifilm-dsc.com/ RAW FILE CONVERTER EX powered by SILKYPIX RAW FILE CONVERTER EX powered by SILKYPIX is RAW conversion software from Ichikawa Soft Laboratory Co., Ltd. View RAW pictures on your computer and convert them into other formats. RAW FILE CONVERTER EX powered by SILKYPIX is available free of charge from the Fujifilm website. https://fujifilm-x.com/support/download/software/raw-file-converterex-powered-by-silkypix/ N • “RAW FILE CONVERTER EX powered by SILKYPIX” is supplied by Ichikawa Soft Laboratory Co., Ltd. • For information on when support will be available, visit: https://fujifilm-x.com/support/compatibility/software/raw-file-converter-expowered-by-silkypix/ Technical Notes 12 352 Software for Use with Your Camera Capture One Express for Fujifilm View RAW pictures on your computer and convert them into other formats. Capture One Express for Fujifilm is available free of charge from Capture One A/S. https://www.captureone.com/products-plans/capture-one-express/fujifilm N Visit the website above for information on when support will be available. Capture One for Fujifilm Capture One for Fujifilm workflow software from Capture One A/S supports tethered shooting and the conversion of RAW pictures into other formats. https://www.captureone.com/explore-features/fujifilm N Visit the website above for information on when support will be available. FUJIFILM Tether Shooting Plug-in (Exclusively for Lightroom) A plug-in for Adobe Lightroom Classic. • FUJIFILM Tether Shooting Plug-in PRO/FUJIFILM Tether Shooting Plug-in https://fujifilm-x.com/products/software/adobe-photoshop-lightroomtether-plugin/ Technical Notes 12 353 Software for Use with Your Camera FUJIFILM X Acquire This computer application lets you connect to the camera via USB or Wi-Fi and automatically download photos to a specified folder as they are taken, or backup and restore the camera via USB. https://fujifilm-x.com/products/software/x-acquire/ FUJIFILM X RAW STUDIO When the camera is connected to a computer via USB, FUJIFILM X RAW STUDIO can use the camera’s unique image processing engine to rapidly convert RAW files to create high-quality images in other formats. https://fujifilm-x.com/products/software/x-raw-studio/ Technical Notes 12 354 For Your Safety IMPORTANT SAFETY INSTRUCTIONS Instructions: All the safety and operating instructions • Read Instructions should be read before the appliance is operated. Instructions: The safety and operating instructions • Retain Instructions should be retained for future reference. Warnings: All warnings on the appliance and in the • Heed Warnings operating instructions should be adhered to. Instructions All operating and use instructions • Follow Instructions: should be followed. Antennas Outdoor Antenna Grounding: If an outside antenna or cable system is connected to the video product, be sure the antenna or cable system is grounded so as to provide some protection against voltage surges and built-up static charges. Section 810 of the National Electrical Code, ANSI/NFPA No. 70, provides information with respect to proper grounding of the mast and supporting structure, grounding of the lead-in wire to an antenna discharge unit, size of grounding conductors, location of antenna discharge unit, connection to grounding electrodes, and requirements for the grounding electrode. EXAMPLE OF ANTENNA GROUNDING AS PER NATIONAL ELECTRICAL CODE Ground Clamp Electric Servicee Equipmentt Antenna Lead in Wire AAnntenna Discharge Unit D (NEC N SECTION 8 810-20) Ground Clamps Power Service Grounding Electrode System (NEC ART 250. PART H) Grounding Conductors (NEC SECTION 810-21) Technical Notes Installation Power Sources: This video product should be operated only from the type of power source indicated on the marking label. If you are not sure of the type of power supply to your home, consult your appliance dealer or local power company. For video products intended to operate from battery power, or other sources, refer to the operating instructions. Grounding or Polarization: This video product is equipped with a polarized alternating-current line plug (a plug having one blade wider than the other). This plug will fit into the power outlet only one way. This is a safety feature. If you are unable to insert the plug fully into the outlet, try reversing the plug. If the plug should still fail to fit, contact your electrician to replace your obsolete outlet. Do not defeat the safety purpose of the polarized plug. Alternate Warnings: This video product is equipped with a three-wire grounding-type plug, a plug having a third (grounding) pin. This plug will only fit into a grounding-type power outlet. This is a safety feature. If you are unable to insert the plug into the outlet, contact your electrician to replace your obsolete outlet. Do not defeat the safety purpose of the grounding type plug. Overloading: Do not overload wall outlets and extension cords as this can result in a risk of fire or electric shock. Ventilation: Slots and openings in the cabinet are provided for ventilation, to ensure reliable operation of the video product and to protect it from overheating, and these openings must not be blocked or covered. The openings should never be blocked by placing the video product on a bed, sofa, rug, or other similar surface. This video product should not be placed in a built-in installation such as a bookcase or rack unless proper ventilation is provided or the manufacturer’s instructions have been adhered to. This video product should never be placed near or over a radiator or heat register. Attachments: Do not use attachments not recommended by the video product manufacturer as they may cause hazards. Water and Moisture: Do not use this video product near water—for example, near a bath tub, wash bowl, kitchen sink, or laundry tub, in a wet basement, or near a swimming pool, and the like. Power-Cord Protection: Power-supply cords should be routed so that they are not likely to be walked on or pinched by items placed upon or against them, paying particular attention to cords at plugs, convenience receptacles, and the point where they exit from the appliance. Accessories: Do not place this video product on an unstable cart, stand, tripod, bracket, or table. The video product may fall, causing serious injury to a child or adult, and serious damage to the appliance. Use only with a cart, stand, tripod, bracket, or table recommended by the manufacturer, or sold with the video product. Any mounting of the appliance should follow the manufacturer’s instructions, and should use a mounting accessory recommended by the manufacturer. An appliance and cart combination should be moved with care. Quick stops, excessive force, and uneven surfaces may cause the appliance and cart combination to overturn. 12 355 Power Lines: An outside antenna system should not be locat- Damage Requiring Service: Unplug this video product from ed in the vicinity of overhead power lines or other electric the wall outlet and refer servicing to qualified service personlight or power circuits, or where it can fall into such power nel under the following conditions: lines or circuits. When installing an outside antenna system, • When the power-supply cord or plug is damaged extreme care should be taken to keep from touching such • If liquid has been spilled, or objects have fallen into the power lines or circuits as contact with them might be fatal. video product. • If the video product has been exposed to rain or water. Use If the video product has been dropped or the cabinet has Cleaning: Unplug this video product from the wall outlet be- • been damaged. fore cleaning. Do not use liquid cleaners or aerosol cleaners. If the video product does not operate normally follow the Use a damp cloth for cleaning. operating instructions. Adjust only those controls that are Object and Liquid Entry: Never push objects of any kind into covered by the operating instructions as an improper adjustthis video product through openings as they may touch dan- ment of other controls may result in damage and will often gerous voltage points or short out parts that could result in require extensive work by a qualified technician to restore a fire or electric shock. Never spill liquid of any kind on the the video product to its normal operation. video product. When the video product exhibits a distinct change in perforLightning: For added protection for this video product re- mance — this indicates a need for service. ceiver during a lightning storm, or when it is left unattended Replacement Parts: When replacement parts are required, be and unused for long periods of time, unplug it from the wall sure the service technician has used replacement parts specoutlet and disconnect the antenna or cable system. This will ified by the manufacturer or have the same characteristics as prevent damage to the video product due to lightning and the original part. Unauthorized substitutions may result in power-line surges. fire, electric shock or other hazards. Service Safety Check: Upon completion of any service or repairs to Servicing: Do not attempt to service this video product this video product, ask the service technician to perform yourself as opening or removing covers may expose you to safety checks to determine that the video product is in propdangerous voltage or other hazards. Refer all servicing to er operating condition. qualified service personnel. Be sure to read these notes before use Safety Notes • Make sure that you use your camera correctly. Read these The symbols on the product (including the accesories) represent the following: safety notes and your Basic Manual carefully before use. AC • After reading these safety notes, store them in a safe place. DC About the Icons The icons shown below are used in this document to indicate the severity of the injury or damage that can result if the information indicated by the icon is ignored and the product is used incorrectly as a result. Class II equipment (The construction of the product is double-insulated.) WARNING This icon indicates that death or serious inWARNING jury can result if the information is ignored. Technical Notes 12 This icon indicates that personal injury or CAUTION material damage can result if the information is ignored. The icons shown below are used to indicate the nature of the instructions which are to be observed. Triangular icons tell you that this information requires attention (“Important”). Circular icons with a diagonal bar tell you that the action indicated is prohibited (“Prohibited”). Filled circles with an exclamation mark indicate an action that must be performed (“Required”). 356 Unplug from power socket If a problem arises, turn the camera off, remove the battery, disconnect the USB cable, and unplug the AC power adapter. Continued use of the camera when it is emitting smoke, is emitting any unusual odor, or is in any other abnormal state can cause a fire or electric shock. Contact your Fujifilm dealer. Do not allow water or foreign objects to enter the camera or connecting cables. Do not use the camera or connecting cables following ingress of fresh or salt water, milk, beverages, detergents, or other liquids. Should liquid find its way into the camera or connecting cables, turn the camera off, remove the battery, disconnect the USB cable, and disconnect and unplug the AC adapter. Continued use of the camera can cause a fire or electric shock. Contact your Fujifilm dealer. For Your Safety WARNING Do not use in the bathroom or shower Do not disassemble Do not touch internal parts Do not use the camera in the bathroom or shower. This can cause a fire or electric shock. Never attempt to change or take apart the camera (never open the case). Failure to observe this precaution can cause fire or electric shock. Should the case break open as the result of a fall or other accident, do not touch the exposed parts. Failure to observe this precaution could result in electric shock or in injury from touching the damaged parts. Remove the battery immediately, taking care to avoid injury or electric shock, and take the product to the point of purchase for consultation. Do not change, heat or unduly twist or pull the connection cord and do not place heavy objects on the connection cord. These actions could damage the cord and cause a fire or electric shock. If the cord is damaged, contact your Fujifilm dealer. Do not use cables with bent connectors. Do not place the camera on an unstable surface. This can cause the camera to fall or tip over and cause injury. Never attempt to take pictures while in motion. Do not use the camera while walking or driving. This can result in you falling down or being involved in a traffic accident. Do not touch any metal parts of the camera during a thunderstorm. This can cause an electric shock due to induced current from the lightning discharge. Do not use the battery except as specified. Load the battery as shown by the indicator. Use only batteries or AC power adapters specified for use with this camera. Do not use voltages other than the power supply voltage shown. The use of other power sources can cause a fire. Do not use the charger to charge batteries other than those specified here. The supplied charger is for use only with batteries of the type supplied with the camera. Using the charger to charge conventional batteries or other types of rechargeable batteries can cause the battery to leak, overheat or burst. Using a flash too close to a person’s eyes may cause visual impairment. Take particular care when photographing infants and young children. Do not remain in prolonged contact with hot surfaces. Do not leave one part of the body in contact with the product for prolonged periods while the product is on. Failure to observe this precaution could result in low-temperature burns, particularly during prolonged use, at high ambient temperatures, when HIGH is selected for AUTO POWER OFF TEMP., or with users who suffer from poor circulation or reduced sensation, in which case use of a tripod or similar precautions are recommended. Do not use in the presence of flammable objects, explosive gases, or dust. When carrying the battery, install it in a digital camera or keep it in the hard case. When storing the battery, keep it in the hard case. When discarding, cover the battery terminals with insulation tape. Contact with other metallic objects or batteries could cause the battery to ignite or burst. Keep memory cards, hot shoes, and other small parts out of the reach of small children. Children may swallow small parts; keep out of reach of children. Should a child swallow a small part, seek medical attention or call emergency. Keep out of reach of small children. Among the elements that could cause injury are the strap, which could become entangled about a child’s neck, causing strangulation, and the flash, which could cause visual impairment. Follow the directions of airline and hospital personnel. This product generates radio-frequency emissions that could interfere with navigational or medical equipment. Technical Notes Do not disassemble, modify, or heat batteries. Do not drop, strike, or throw batteries or otherwise subject them to strong impacts. Do not use batteries that show signs of leaking, deformation, discoloration, or other abnormalities. Use only designated chargers to recharge rechargeable batteries and do not attempt to recharge non-rechargeable Li-ion or alkaline batteries. Do not short batteries or store them with metallic objects. Failure to observe these precautions could result in the batteries overheating, igniting, rupturing, or leaking, causing fire, burns, or other injury. WARNING If the battery leaks and fluid gets in contact with your eyes, skin or clothing, flush the affected area with clean water and seek medical attention or call an emergency number right away. 12 357 CAUTION Do not use this camera in locations affected by oil fumes, steam, humidity or dust. This can cause a fire or electric shock. Do not leave this camera in places subject to extremely high temperatures. Do not leave the camera in locations such as a sealed vehicle or in direct sunlight. This can cause a fire. Do not place heavy objects on the camera. This can cause the heavy object to tip over or fall and cause injury. Do not move the camera while the AC power adapter is still connected. Do not pull on the connection cord to disconnect the AC power adapter. This can damage the power cord or cables and cause a fire or electric shock. Do not cover or wrap the camera or the AC power adapter in a cloth or blanket. This can cause heat to build up and distort the casing or cause a fire. Do not use the plug if it is damaged or if it does not fit securely into the outlet. Failure to observe this precaution could result in fire or electric shock. When you are cleaning the camera or you do not plan to use the camera for an extended period, remove the battery and disconnect and unplug the AC power adapter. Failure to do so can cause a fire or electric shock. When charging ends, unplug the charger from the power socket. Leaving the charger plugged into the power socket can cause a fire. When a memory card is removed, the card could come out of the slot too quickly. Use your finger to hold it and gently release the card. Injury could result to those struck by the ejected card. Do not handle the memory card immediately after shooting. The memory card may be hot, resulting in burns. Wait for the card to cool before removing it from the camera. Technical Notes Request regular internal testing and cleaning for your camera. Build-up of dust in your camera can cause a fire or electric shock. Contact your Fujifilm dealer to request internal cleaning every two years. Please note that this service is not free of charge. Dispose of the product in accord with location regulations. Danger of explosion if battery is incorrectly replaced. Replace only with the same or equivalent type. Batteries (battery pack or batteries installed) shall not be exposed to excessive heat such as sunshine, fire or the like. 12 358 For Your Safety The Battery and Power Supply Note: Check the type of battery used in your camera and read L Cautions: Handling the Battery the appropriate sections. • Do not transport or store with metal objects such as neckWARNING: Battery shall not be exposed to excessive heat laces or hairpins. • Do not expose to flame or heat. such as sunshine, fire or the like. Do not disassemble or modify. The following describes the proper use of batteries and how • Do not expose to low atmospheric pressures. to prolong their life. Incorrect use can shorten battery life or • • Use with designated chargers only. cause leakage, overheating, fire, or explosion. • Dispose of used batteries promptly. Li-ion Batteries • Do not drop or subject to strong physical shocks. Read this section if your camera uses a rechargeable Li-ion • Do not expose to water. battery. • Keep the terminals clean. The battery is not charged at shipment. Charge the battery • The battery and camera body may become warm to the touch after extended use. This is normal. before use. Keep the battery in its case when not in use. L Caution: Disposal L Notes on the Battery The battery gradually loses its charge when not in use. Dispose of used batteries in accord with local regulations. Attention should be drawn to the environmental aspects of Charge the battery one or two days before use. battery disposal. Use the apparatus under moderate climate. Battery life can be extended by turning the camera off when Do not mechanically crush or split batteries. not in use. Storage If the camera will not be used for an extended period, store it at room temperature with the battery charged to approximately one half to ⁄ capacity. If the camera will not be used for an extended period, remove the battery and store it in a dry place with an ambient temperature of from +15 °C to +25 °C (+59 °F to +77 °F). Do not store in locations exposed to extremes of temperature. L Technical Notes Battery capacity decreases at low temperatures; a depleted AC Power Adapters battery may not function when cold. Keep a fully charged • The AC power adapter is for indoor use only. spare battery in a warm place and exchange as necessary, • Be sure the cable is securely connected to the camera. or keep the battery in your pocket or other warm place and • Turn the camera off before disconnecting the adapter. Disinsert it in the camera only when shooting. Do not place the connect the adapter by the plug, not the cable. battery in direct contact with hand warmers or other heating • Do not disassemble. devices. • Do not expose to high heat and humidity. • Do not subject to strong physical shocks. L Charging the Battery The battery can be charged using the camera and supplied • The adapter may hum or become hot to the touch during AC adapter or an optional BC-W235 dual battery charger. use. This is normal. Charging times will increase at ambient temperatures below • If the adapter causes radio interference, reorient or relocate +10 °C (+50 °F) or above +35 °C (+95 °F). Do not attempt to the receiving antenna. charge the battery at temperatures above +40 °C (+104 °F); at temperatures below +5 °C (+41 °F), the battery will not charge. Do not attempt to recharge a fully charged battery. The battery does not however need to be fully discharged before charging. The battery may be warm to the touch immediately after charging or use. This is normal. L Battery Life A noticeable decrease in the length of time the battery will hold a charge indicates that it has reached the end of its service life and should be replaced. If the battery is left for long periods without charging, you may find that its quality degrades or that it no longer holds a charge. Charge the battery regularly. 12 359 Using the Camera Trademark Information including artificial light sources or natural light sources Digital Split Image is a trademark or registered trademark of such as the sun in a cloudless sky. Failure to observe this FUJIFILM Corporation. Digital Micro Prism is a trademark or precaution could damage the camera image sensor. registered trademark of FUJIFILM Corporation. The typefaces • Strong sunlight focused through the viewfinder may dam- included herein are solely developed by DynaComware Taiage the panel of electronic viewfinder (EVF). Do not aim wan Inc. Apple, iPhone, iPad, Mac, Mac OS X, OS X, macOS, the electronic viewfinder at the sun. Lightning and Apple ProRes are registered trademarks of Apple Inc. in the U.S.A. and other countries. Windows is a Take Test Shots registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation in the U.S.A. Before taking photographs on important occasions (such as and other countries. Android is a trademark or registered at weddings or before taking the camera on a trip), take a trademark of Google LLC. Adobe, the Adobe logo, Phototest shot and view the results to ensure that the camera is shop, and Lightroom are trademarks or registered trademarks functioning normally. FUJIFILM Corporation cannot accept of Adobe Systems Incorporated in the U.S.A. and other counliability for damages or lost profits incurred as a result of tries. Wi-Fi®, the Wi-Fi CERTIFIED logo, and Wi-Fi Protected product malfunction. Setup® are registered trademarks of the Wi-Fi Alliance®. The Notes on Copyright Bluetooth® word mark and logos are registered trademarks Unless intended solely for personal use, images recorded owned by the Bluetooth SIG, Inc., and any use of such marks using your digital camera system cannot be used in ways by Fujifilm is under license. The SDHC and SDXC logos are that infringe copyright laws without the consent of the own- trademarks of SD-3C, LLC. CFexpress is a trademark of the CFA er. Note that some restrictions apply to the photographing (CompactFlash Association). The HDMI logo is a trademark or of stage performances, entertainments, and exhibits, even registered trademark of HDMI Licensing LLC. QR Code is a when intended purely for personal use. Users are also asked registered trademark of DENSO WAVE INCORPORATED. USB to note that the transfer of memory cards containing images Type-C® and USB-C® are registered trademarks of USB Imor data protected under copyright laws is only permissible plementers Forum. All other trade names mentioned in this within the restrictions imposed by those copyright laws. manual are the trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners. Handling To ensure that images are recorded correctly, do not subject Electrical Interference the camera to impact or physical shocks while images are This camera may interfere with hospital or aviation equipbeing recorded. ment. Consult with hospital or airline staff before using the camera in a hospital or on an aircraft. Liquid Crystal In the event that the display is damaged, care should be tak- Color Television Systems en to avoid contact with liquid crystal. Take the urgent action NTSC (National Television System Committee) is a color television telecasting specification adopted mainly in the U.S.A., indicated should any of the following situations arise: • If liquid crystal comes in contact with your skin, clean the Canada, and Japan. PAL (Phase Alternation by Line) is a color area with a cloth and then wash thoroughly with soap and television system adopted mainly in European countries and China. running water. • If liquid crystal enters your eyes, flush the affected eye with Exif Print (Exif Version 2.32) clean water for at least 15 minutes and then seek medical Exif Print is a newly revised digital camera file format in which assistance. information stored with photographs is used for optimal col• If liquid crystal is swallowed, rinse your mouth thoroughly or reproduction during printing. with water. Drink large quantities of water and induce vomIMPORTANT NOTICE: Read Before Using the Software iting, then seek medical assistance. Although the display is manufactured using extremely Direct or indirect export, in whole or in part, of licensed softhigh-precision technology, it may contain pixels that are ware without the permission of the applicable governing always lit or that do not light. This is not a malfunction, and bodies is prohibited. images recorded with the product are unaffected. Lenses and Other Accessories • Use a screw 4.5 mm or shorter when attaching a tripod. • Fujifilm will not be held liable for performance issues or damage caused by the use of third-party accessories. • Do not aim the camera at extremely bright light sources, Technical Notes 12 360 For Your Safety NOTICES To prevent fire or shock hazard, do not expose the unit to rain or moisture. Please read the “Safety Notes” and make sure you understand them before using the camera. Perchlorate Material—special handling may apply. See: http://www.dtsc.ca.gov/hazardouswaste/perchlorate For Customers in the U. S. A. Tested To Comply With FCC Standards FOR HOME OR OFFICE USE A lithium ion battery that is recyclable powers the product you have purchased. Please call 1-800-8-BATTERY for information on how to recycle this battery. California Code of Regulations, Title 20, Division 2, Chapter 4, Article 4, Appliance Efficiency Regulations, Sections 1601 through 1609 Technical Notes Contains IC : 10293A-WMBACBM25 Contains FCC ID : COF-WMBACBM25 FCC Statement: This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. CAUTION: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures: • Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna. • Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver. • Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected. • Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. FCC Caution: Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the user’s authority to operate this equipment. This transmitter must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter. Radiation Exposure Statement: This device meets the government’s requirements for exposure to radio waves. This device is designed and manufactured not to exceed the emission limits for exposure to radio frequency (RF) energy set by the Federal Communications Commission of the U.S. Government. The exposure standard for wireless device employs a unit of measurement known as the Specific Absorption Rate, or SAR. The SAR limit set by the FCC is 1.6W/kg. Tests for SAR are conducted using standard operating positions accepted by the FCC with the device transmitting at its highest certified power level in all tested frequency bands. Notes on the Grant: To comply with Part 15 of the FCC Rules, this product must be used with a Fujifilm-specified ferrite-core A/V cable, USB cable, and DC supply cord. 12 361 For Customers in Canada CAN ICES-003 (B)/NMB-003(B) CAUTION: This Class B digital apparatus complies with Canadian ICES-003. Industry Canada statement: This device complies with Industry Canada’s licence-exempt RSSs. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This device may not cause interference; and (2) This device must accept any interference, including interference that may cause undesired operation of the device. This device and its antenna(s) must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter, except tested built-in radios. The County Code Selection feature is disabled for products marketed in the US/ Canada. Radiation Exposure Statement: The available scientific evidence does not show that any health problems are associated with using low power wireless devices. There is no proof, however, that these low power wireless devices are absolutely safe. Low power Wireless devices emit low levels of radio frequency energy (RF) in the microwave range while being used. Whereas high levels of RF can produce health effects (by heating tissue), exposure of low-level RF that does not produce heating effects causes no known adverse health effects. Many studies of low-level RF exposures have not found any biological effects. Some studies have suggested that some biological effects might occur, but such findings have not been confirmed by additional research. X-S20 has been tested and found to comply with IC radiation exposure limits set forth for an uncontrolled environment and meets RSS-102 of the IC radio frequency (RF) Exposure rules. Operation in the band 5150–5250 MHz is only for indoor use to reduce the potential for harmful interference to co-channel mobile satellite systems. Disposal of Electrical and Electronic Equipment in Private Households In the European Union, Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein: This symbol on the product, or in the manual and in the warranty, and/or on its packaging indicates that this product shall not be treated as household waste. Instead it should be taken to an applicable collection point for the recycling of electrical and electronic equipment. By ensuring this product is disposed of correctly, you will help prevent potential negative consequences to the environment and human health, which could otherwise be caused by inappropriate waste handling of this product. This symbol on the batteries or accumulators indicates that those batteries shall not be treated as household waste. If your equipment contains easy removable batteries or accumulators please dispose these separately according to your local requirements. The recycling of materials will help to conserve natural resources. For more detailed information about recycling this product, please contact your local city office, your household waste disposal service or the shop where you purchased the product. In Countries Outside the European Union, Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein: If you wish to discard this product, including the batteries or accumulators, please contact your local authorities and ask for the correct way of disposal. In Japan: This symbol on the batteries indicates that they are to be disposed of separately. Caring for the Camera To ensure continued enjoyment of the product, observe the following precautions. Technical Notes Storage and Use If the camera will not be used for an extended period, remove the battery and memory card. Do not store or use the camera in locations that are: • exposed to rain, steam, or smoke • very humid or extremely dusty • exposed to direct sunlight or very high temperatures, such as in a closed vehicle on a sunny day • extremely cold • subject to strong vibration • exposed to strong magnetic fields, such as near a broadcasting antenna, power line, radar emitter, motor, transformer, or magnet • in contact with volatile chemicals such as pesticides • next to rubber or vinyl products 12 362 For Your Safety Wireless Network and Bluetooth Devices: Cautions This product complies with the following EU Directives: • RoHS Directive 2011/65/EU • RE Directive 2014/53/EU Hereby, FUJIFILM Corporation declares that the radio equipment type FF220002 is in compliance with Directive 2014/53/EU. The full text of the EU declaration of conformity is available at the following internet address: https://dl.fujifilm-x.com/global/products/cameras/x-s20/pdf/x-s20_doc-bkk.pdf The full text of the UK declaration of conformity is available at the following internet address: https://dl.fujifilm-x.com/en-gb/products/cameras/x-s20/pdf/x-s20_doc-bkk.pdf This compliance is indicated by the following conformity marking placed on the product: 363 Technical Notes This marking is valid for non-Telecom products and EU harmonized Telecom products (e.g. Bluetooth®). • Maximum radio-frequency power (EIRP): WLAN 2.4 GHz: 14.74 dBm WLAN 5 GHz: 9.94 dBm Bluetooth: 6.08 dBm IMPORTANT: Read the following notices before using the camera’s built-in wireless transmitter. Q This product, which contains encryption function developed in the United States, is controlled by the United States Export Administration Regulations and may not be exported or re-exported to any country to which the United States embargoes goods. device. Fujifilm does not accept liability for damages resulting from unauthorized • Use only a wireless network or Bluetooth device. use. Do not use in applications requiring a high degree of reliability, for example in medical devices or other systems that may directly or indirectly impact human life. When using the device in computer and other systems that demand a greater degree of reliability than offered by wireless network or Bluetooth devices, be sure to take all necessary precautions to ensure safety and prevent malfunction. • Use only in the country in which the device was purchased. This device conforms to regulations governing wireless network and Bluetooth devices in the country in which it was purchased. Observe all location regulations when using the device. Fujifilm does not accept liability for problems arising from use in other jurisdictions. • Do not use the device in locations subject to magnetic fields, static electricity, or radio interference. Do not use the transmitter in the vicinity of microwave ovens or in other locations subject to magnetic fields, static electricity, or radio interference that may prevent reception of wireless signals. Mutual interference may occur when the transmitter is used in the vicinity of other wireless devices operating in the 2.4 GHz band. • The wireless transmitter operates in the 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands using DSSS, OFDM and GFSK modulation. • Security: Wireless network and Bluetooth devices transmit data via radio and consequently their use requires greater attention to security than applies in the case of wired networks. - Do not connect to unknown networks or networks to which you do not have access rights, even if they are displayed on your device, as such access may be considered unauthorized. Connect only to networks to which you have access rights. - Be aware that wireless transmissions may be vulnerable to interception by third parties. - Do not connect this device directly to telecommunications networks (including public wireless LANs) operated by providers or mobile, landline, Internet, or other telecommunications services. The • following may be punishable by law: - Disassembly or modification or this device - Removal of device certification labels • This device operates on the same frequency as commercial, educational, and medical devices and wireless transmitters. It also operates on the same frequency as licensed transmitters and special unlicensed low-voltage transmitters used in RFID tracking systems for assembly lines and in other similar applications. • To prevent interference with the above devices, observe the following precautions. Confirm that the RFID transmitter is not in operation before using this device. Should you observe that the device causes interference in licensed transmitters used for RFID tracking, immediately stop using the affected frequency or move the device to another location. If you notice that this device causes interference in low-voltage RFID tracing systems, contact a Fujifilm representative. 12 • Do not use this device on board an aircraft. When on an aircraft, follow the instructions of airline personnel. Note that this prod- uct may emit radio-frequency radiation even when off. This can be prevented by selecting ON for AIRPLANE MODE in the network/USB setting menu before boarding. • Requirements in AT/BE/BG/CZ/DK/EE/FR/DE/IS/IE/IT/EL/ES/CY/LV/LI/LT/LU/HU/MT/NL/NO/PL/PT/RO/SI/SK/TR/FI/SE/CH/ UK/HR. 5150 MHz–5350 MHz is for indoor use only. Specific Absorption Rate (SAR) Information SAR is measured with the device at 0 mm to the body, while transmitting at the highest certified output power level in all frequency bands of the device. The maximum SAR value is 0.26 W/kg (head/body) averaged over 10 gram of tissue. U.K. Importer: FUJIFILM UK Limited Fujifilm House, Whitbread Way, Bedford, Bedfordshire, MK42 0ZE, United Kingdom EU Importer: FUJIFILM Electronic Imaging Europe GmbH Fujistrasse 1 47533 Kleve, Germany Technical Notes 12 364 For Your Safety Be sure to read these notes before using the lens Safety Notes WARNING • Make sure that you use the lens correctly. Read these safety notes and the camera Basic Manual carefully before use. • After reading these safety notes, store them in a safe place. About the Icons The icons shown below are used in this document to indicate the severity of the injury or damage that can result if the information indicated by the icon is ignored and the product is used incorrectly as a result. This icon indicates that death or serious WARNING injury can result if the information is ignored. This icon indicates that personal injury or CAUTION material damage can result if the information is ignored. The icons shown below are used to indicate the nature of the instructions which are to be observed. Triangular icons tell you that this information requires attention (“Important”). Circular icons with a diagonal bar tell you that the action indicated is prohibited (“Prohibited”). Filled circles with an exclamation mark indicate an action that must be performed (“Required”). Do not immerse Do not immerse in or expose to water. Failure to observe this precaution can cause a fire or electric shock. Do not disassemble Do not disassemble (do not open the case). Failure to observe this precaution can cause fire, electric shock, or injury due to product malfunction. Do not touch internal parts Should the case break open as the result of a fall or other accident, do not touch the exposed parts. Failure to observe this precaution could result in electric shock or in injury from touching the damaged parts. Remove the battery immediately, taking care to avoid injury or electric shock, and take the product to the point of purchase for consultation. Do not place on unstable surfaces. The product may fall, causing injury. Do not view the sun through the lens or camera viewfinders. Failure to observe this precaution can cause permanent visual impairment. CAUTION Do not use or store in locations that are exposed to steam, or smoke or are very humid or extremely dusty. Failure to observe this precaution can cause fire or electric shock. Do not leave in direct sunlight or in locations subject to very high temperatures, such as in a closed vehicle on a sunny day. Failure to observe this precaution can cause fire. Keep out of the reach of small children. This product could cause injury in the hands of a child. Do not handle with wet hands. Failure to observe this precaution can cause electric shock. Keep the sun out of the frame when shooting backlit subjects. Sunlight focused into the camera when the sun is in or close to the frame can cause fire or burns. Do not carry the camera or lens while they are attached to a tripod. The product can fall or strike other objects, causing injury. Technical Notes When the product is not in use, replace the lens caps and store out of direct sunlight. Sunlight focused by the lens can cause fire or burns. 12 365 Product Care To ensure continued enjoyment of the product, observe the following precautions. Camera body: Use a soft, dry cloth to clean the camera body after each use. Do not use alcohol, thinner, or other volatile chemicals, which could discolor or deform the leather on the camera body. Any liquid on the camera should be removed immediately with a soft, dry cloth. Use a blower to remove dust from the monitor, taking care to avoid scratches, and then gently wipe with a soft, dry cloth. Any remaining stains can be removed by wiping gently with a piece of Fujifilm lens-cleaning paper to which a small amount of lens-cleaning fluid has been applied. To prevent dust entering the camera, replace the body cap when no lens is in place. Image sensor: Multiple photographs marred by spots or blotches in identical locations may indicate the presence of dust on the image sensor. Clean the sensor using D USER SETTING > SENSOR CLEANING. Technical Notes 12 366 Cleaning the Image Sensor Dust that cannot be removed using D USER SETTING > SENSOR CLEANING can be removed manually as described below. O Note that there will be a charge to repair or replace the image sensor if it is damaged during cleaning. 1 Use a blower (not a brush) to remove dust from the sensor. N Do not use a brush or blower brush. Failure to observe this precaution could damage the sensor. 2 Check whether the dust has been successfully removed. Repeat Steps 1 and 2 as necessary. 3 Replace the body cap or lens. Technical Notes 12 367 Firmware Updates Updates to product firmware may result in changes not described in the manual. For more information, visit: https://fujifilm-x.com/support/download/firmware/cameras/ Checking the Firmware Version O The camera will only display the firmware version if a memory card is inserted. 1 2 Turn the camera off and check that a memory card is inserted. 3 Turn the camera off. Turn the camera on while pressing the DISP/BACK button. The current firmware version will be displayed; check the firmware version. N To view the firmware version or update firmware for optional accessories such as interchangeable lenses, shoe-mounted flash units, and mount adapters, mount the accessories on the camera. Technical Notes 12 368 Troubleshooting Consult the table below should you encounter problems using your camera. If you don’t find the solution here, contact your local Fujifilm distributor. Power and Battery Problem Solution • The battery was not charged before first use: The battery is not The camera does not turn on. The monitor does not turn on. charged at shipment. Charge the battery before first use (P 37). • The battery is exhausted: Charge the battery or insert a fully-charged spare battery (P 37). • The battery is inserted incorrectly: Reinsert in the correct orientation (P 34). • The battery-chamber cover is not latched: Latch the battery-chamber cover (P 34). The monitor may not turn on if the camera is turned off and then on again very quickly. Keep the shutter button pressed halfway until the monitor activates. Technical Notes 12 369 Problem Solution • The battery is cold: Warm the battery by placing it in a pock- et or other warm place and reinsert it in the camera immediately before taking a picture. • There is dirt on the battery terminals: Clean the terminals with a soft, dry cloth. ON is selected for G AF/MF SETTING > PRE-AF: Turn • The battery runs down PRE-AF off (P 154). quickly. • The camera is in AUTO mode: To extend battery endurance, we recommend that you choose a different mode (P 68). • The battery has been charged many times: Select BATTERY AGE to view the battery age; if the battery is old, replace it with a new battery (P 273). The battery is exhausted: Charge the battery or insert a The camera turns off fully-charged spare battery (P 37). suddenly. The camera does not The camera may be busy. Check the indicator lamp turn off. (P 8). Technical Notes 12 370 Troubleshooting Problem Solution • Make sure that the AC power adapter is correctly plugged in (P 37). • Ensure that the plug adapter is correctly connected to the Charging does not start. AC power adapter (P 37). • The battery has not been recharged for an extended period: If the battery has not been charged for an extended period, charging will be disabled to ensure safety. Replace it with a new battery. • Insert the camera battery (P 34). • Reinsert the camera battery in the correct orientation (P 34). Charging does not start • Confirm that the camera is connected to the computer (USB). (P 40). • If the computer is off or in sleep mode, turn on or wake the computer and disconnect and reconnect the USB cable (P 40). • Insert the battery. Charging does not start • Reinsert the battery in the correct orientation. (battery charger). • The AC adapter is not correctly connected to the charger: Check that adapter is correctly connected to the charger. Charging is slow. Charge the battery at room temperature. Technical Notes 12 371 Problem Solution • There is dirt on the battery terminals: Clean the terminals The indicator lamp blinks, but the battery does not charge. with a soft, dry cloth (P 34). • The battery has been charged many times: Select BATTERY AGE to view the battery age; if the battery is old, replace it with a new battery (P 273). If the battery still fails to charge, contact your Fujifilm dealer (P 350). The power supply icon is Confirm that POWER SUPPLY ON/COMM OFF is senot displayed. lected for USB POWER SUPPLY/COMM SETTING (P 268). Menus and Displays Problem Solution Select ENGLISH for D USER SETTING > Qa Display is not in English. (P 45, 272). Technical Notes 12 372 Troubleshooting Shooting Problem Solution • The memory card is full: Insert a new memory card or delete pictures (P 34, 229). • The memory card is not formatted: Format the memory card in the camera (P 270). • There is dirt on the memory card contacts: Clean the contacts with a soft, dry cloth. No picture is taken when The memory card is damaged: Insert a new memory card • the shutter button is (P 34). pressed. • The battery is exhausted: Charge the battery or insert a fully-charged spare battery (P 37). • The camera has turned off automatically: Turn the camera on (P 41). • You are using a third-party mount adapter: Select ON for SHOOT WITHOUT LENS (P 293). Mottling (“noise”) Gain is increased to aid composition when the subject is appears in the monitor poorly lit and aperture is stopped down, which may result or viewfinder when in noticeable mottling when images are previewed in the the shutter button is displays. Images taken with the camera are unaffected. pressed halfway. • The subject is not suited to autofocus: Use focus lock or manual focus (P 108). The camera does not focus. • The focus area is too small for the intended subject: Increase the size of the focus area by a couple of steps (P 98). Technical Notes 12 373 Problem No panorama is recorded when the shutter button is pressed. Solution The indicator lamp was orange when you attempted to record a panorama: Wait until the indicator lamps turns off (P 8). • The subject’s face is obscured by sunglasses, a hat, long hair, or other objects: Remove the obstructions (P 156). • The subject’s face occupies only a small area of the frame: Change the composition so that the subject’s face occupies a larger area of the frame (P 156). No face is detected. • The subject’s face is turned away from the camera: Ask the subject to face the camera (P 156). • g FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING is off: Turn g FACE/EYE DETECTION SETTING on (P 156). • The camera is tilted: Keep the camera level. • The subject’s face is poorly lit: Shoot in better light. • The subject is partially hidden: Choose a vantage point where you can see as much of the subject as possible (P 158). • The subject occupies only a small portion of the frame: Get No subject is detected. closer to your subject so it occupies more of the frame (P 158). • OFF is selected for SUBJECT DETECTION SETTING: Select SUBJECT DETECTION ON (P 158). • The subject is poorly lit: Shoot in better light. Technical Notes 12 374 Troubleshooting Problem Solution • The flash is disabled: Adjust settings (P 178). • The electronic shutter is enabled: Choose a SHUTTER TYPE that does not use the electronic shutter (P 172). The flash does not fire. • The battery is exhausted: Charge the battery or insert a fully-charged spare battery (P 37). • The camera is in bracketing or continuous mode: Select single frame mode (P 5). • The flash is lowered: Raise the flash (P 123). Some flash modes are not available. OFF is selected for SOUND & FLASH: Select ON (P 274). • The subject is not in range of the flash: Position the subject in The flash does not fully light the subject. range of the flash. • The flash window is obstructed: Hold the camera correctly. • Shutter speed is faster than the sync speed: Choose a slower shutter speed (P 73, 77, 391). Technical Notes 12 375 Problem Pictures are blurred. Pictures are mottled. Solution • The lens is dirty: Clean the lens. • The lens is blocked: Keep objects away from the lens (P 48). • s is displayed during shooting and the focus frame is displayed in red: Check focus before shooting (P 49). • Shutter speed is slow and the ambient temperature is* high: This is normal and does not indicate a malfunction. Use pixel mapping (P 143). * X-rays, cosmic rays, and other forms of radiation interacting with the image sensor may cause bright spots of various colors such as white, red, and blue. Pixel mapping helps reduce the occurrence of such bright spots. • The camera has been used continuously at high temperatures: Turn the camera off and wait for it to cool down (P 41, 386). • A temperature warning is displayed: Turn the camera off and wait for it to cool down (P 41, 386). Technical Notes 12 376 Troubleshooting Playback Problem Pictures are grainy. Playback zoom is unavailable. No sound in movie playback. Solution The pictures were taken with a different make or model of camera. The pictures were created using RESIZE or with a different make or model of camera. • Playback volume is too low: Adjust playback volume (P 277). • The microphone was obstructed: Hold the camera correctly during recording. • The speaker is obstructed: Hold the camera correctly during playback. • OFF is selected for SOUND & FLASH: Select ON (P 274). Selected pictures are not deleted. Some of the pictures selected for deletion are protected. Pictures remain after Remove protection using the device with which it was ERASE > ALL FRAMES is originally applied (P 233). selected. The battery-chamber cover was opened while the camFile numbering is era was on. Turn the camera off before opening the batunexpectedly reset. tery-chamber cover (P 303). Technical Notes 12 377 Connections Problem Solution The camera is connected to a TV: Pictures will be displayed on The monitor is blank. the TV instead of in the camera monitor (P 51). Q EVF ONLY + E is selected for VIEW MODE Both the TV and camera SETTING: Put your eye to the viewfinder or choose a monitor are blank. different VIEW MODE SETTING option (P 14). • The camera is not properly connected: Connect the camera properly (P 51). No picture or sound • Input on the television is set to “TV”: Set input to “HDMI” on TV. (P 51). • The volume on the TV is too low: Use the controls on the television to adjust the volume (P 51). The computer does not Be sure the camera and computer are correctly connected recognize the camera. (P 253). FUJIFILM X RAW STUDIO Check the option selected for CONNECTION MODE or FUJIFILM X Acquire on the camera. Select USB RAW CONV./BACKUP fails to correctly detect RESTORE before connecting the USB cable (P 266). the camera. Technical Notes 12 378 Troubleshooting Problem Cannot connect to iPhones or iPads. Cannot connect to smartphone. Solution POWER SUPPLY ON/COMM OFF is selected for USB POWER SUPPLY/COMM SETTING. Select POWER SUPPLY OFF/COMM ON when the camera is connected via a Lightning connection to a device that do not supply power (P 268). Confirm that the camera is correctly connected: The procedure for connecting the camera varies with the type of connector with which the smartphone is equipped (P 250). Technical Notes 12 379 Wireless Transfer For additional information on troubleshooting wireless connections, visit: https://digitalcamera-support-en.fujifilm.com/ Problem Cannot connect to smartphone. The camera is slow to connect or upload pictures to the smartphone. Upload fails or is interrupted. Solution • The smartphone is too far away: Move the devices closer (P 247). • Nearby devices are causing radio interference: Move the cam- era and smartphone away from microwave ovens or cordless phones (P 247). • The smartphone is connected to another device: The smart- Technical Notes phone and camera can connect to only one device at a time. End the connection and try again (P 247). • There are several smartphones in the vicinity: Try connecting again. The presence of multiple smartphones can make Cannot upload images. connection difficult (P 247). • The image was created on another device: The camera may not be able to upload images created on other devices. • The image is a movie: Uploading movies takes some time. In addition, smartphones may not accept upload of movies in formats they do not support. Select ON for Bluetooth/SMARTPHONE SETTING > RESIZE IMAGE FOR SMARTPHONE. Selecting OFF Smartphone will not increases upload times for larger images; in addition, display pictures. some phones may not display images over a certain size (P 264). 12 380 Troubleshooting Miscellaneous Problem Solution • Temporary camera malfunction: Remove and reinsert the battery (P 34). The camera is unresponsive. • The battery is exhausted: Charge the battery or insert a fully-charged spare battery (P 37). • The camera is connected to a wireless LAN: End the connection. • The controls are locked: Press and hold the MENU/OK button The camera does not function as expected. No sound. Pressing the Q button does not display the quick menu. to unlock the controls (P 11, 13). Remove and reinsert the battery (P 34). If the problem persists, contact your Fujifilm dealer. • Adjust the volume (P 275). • OFF is selected for SOUND & FLASH: Select ON (P 274). TTL-LOCK is active: End TTL-LOCK (P 179). Technical Notes 12 381 Warning Messages and Displays The following warnings appear in the display. Warning Description Low battery. Charge the battery or insert a fully-charged i (red) spare battery. Battery exhausted. Charge the battery or insert a fulj (blinks red) ly-charged spare battery. The camera cannot focus. Use focus lock to focus on ans (displayed in red with other subject at the same distance, then recompose the red focus frame) picture. The subject is too bright or too dark and the picture will be Aperture or shutter over- or under-exposed. Use the flash for additional lightspeed displayed in red ing when taking photographs of poorly-lit subject. FOCUS ERROR Camera malfunction. Turn the camera off, remove the lens, LENS CONTROL ERROR and check for foreign matter between the lens and the TURN OFF THE CAMERA camera body, then replace the lens and turn the camera AND TURN ON AGAIN on. If the problem persists, contact a Fujifilm dealer. • The memory card is not formatted or the memory card has been formatted in a computer or other device: Format the memory card using D USER SETTING > FORMAT. CARD NOT INITIALIZED • The memory card contacts require cleaning: Clean the contacts with a soft, dry cloth. If the message is repeated, format the card. If the message persists, replace the card. • Camera malfunction: Contact a Fujifilm dealer. Technical Notes 12 382 Warning Messages and Displays Warning LENS ERROR CARD ERROR PROTECTED CARD BUSY b MEMORY FULL Description Turn the camera off, remove the lens, and check for foreign matter between the lens and the camera body, then replace the lens and turn the camera on. If the problem persists, contact a Fujifilm dealer. • The memory card is not formatted for use in the camera: Format the card. • The memory card contacts require cleaning or the memory card is damaged: Clean the contacts with a soft, dry cloth. If the message is repeated, format the card. If the message persists, replace the card. • Incompatible memory card: Use a compatible card. • Camera malfunction: Contact a Fujifilm dealer. The memory card is locked. Unlock the card. The memory card is incorrectly formatted. Use the camera to format the card. The memory card is full and pictures cannot be recorded. Delete pictures or insert a memory card with more free space. Technical Notes 12 383 Warning Description • Memory card error or connection error: Reinsert the card or WRITE ERROR FRAME NO. FULL Technical Notes 12 384 turn the camera off and then on again. If the message persists, contact a Fujifilm dealer. • Not enough memory remaining to record additional pictures: Delete pictures or insert a memory card with more free space. • The memory card is not formatted: Format the memory card. • The memory card was removed while data were being recorded: Do not remove the memory card during recording. • The memory card write speed is slow: When recording movies, be sure the memory card write speed is fast enough. The camera has run out of frame numbers (current frame number is 999-9999). Insert a formatted memory card and select RENEW for D SAVE DATA SET-UP > FRAME NO.. Take a picture to reset frame numbering to 100-0001, then select CONTINUOUS for FRAME NO.. Warning Messages and Displays Warning Description • The file is corrupt or was not created with the camera: The file cannot be viewed. READ ERROR • The memory card contacts require cleaning: Clean the con- tacts with a soft, dry cloth. If the message is repeated, format the card. If the message persists, replace the card. • Camera malfunction: Contact a Fujifilm dealer. An attempt was made to delete or rotate to a protected picPROTECTED FRAME ture. Remove protection and try again. The picture is damaged or was not created with the camera. CAN NOT CROP Print orders can contain no more than 999 pictures. Copy any additional pictures you wish to print to another memoDPOF FILE ERROR ry card and create a second print order. The picture cannot be printed using DPOF. CAN NOT SET DPOF F CAN NOT SET DPOF Movies cannot be printed using DPOF. The selected picture cannot be rotated. CAN NOT ROTATE F CAN NOT ROTATE Movies cannot be rotated. Technical Notes 12 385 Warning Messages and Displays Warning Description F CANNOT EXECUTE The selected operation is not supported: Check whether the m CANNOT EXECUTE picture was recorded with a different model of camera. The camera is approaching the maximum temperature alp (yellow) CAMERA IS APPROACHING lowed when STANDARD is selected for AUTO POWER OFF TEMP. and will shortly turn off automatically. Turn the STANDARD camera off and wait for it to cool. TEMPERATURE LIMIT The camera is approaching the maximum temperature allowed when HIGH is selected for AUTO POWER OFF p (yellow) TEMP. and will shortly turn off automatically. Remaining CAMERA IS APPROACHING in contact with the camera could result in low-temperature HIGH TEMPERburns; mount the camera on a tripod or take other steps to ATURE LIMIT.DO NOT avoid prolonged contact with the camera. The camera will HOLD CAMERA FOR shortly turn off automatically. Turn the camera off and wait LONG PERIODS OF TIME for it to cool. Mottling may increase in pictures taken when this warning is displayed. The camera temperature has reached the cutoff point and p (red) the camera is about to turn off automatically. Turn the camHIGH TEMPERATURE era off and wait for it to cool. Mottling may increase in picLIMIT REACHED tures taken when this warning is displayed. SHUTTING DOWN Technical Notes 12 386 Memory Card Capacity The following table shows the recording time or number of pictures available at different image sizes. All figures are approximate; file size varies with the scene recorded, producing wide variations in the number of files that can be stored. The number of exposures or length remaining may not diminish at an even rate. SD memory cards 64 GB Capacity T FINE O 3∶2 RAW (UNCOMPRESSED) Photos RAW (LOSSLESS COMPRESSED) RAW (COMPRESSED) Movies * V2160 W1080 NORMAL 4080 6040 1090 1990 2760 158 minutes 158 minutes * Assumes default bit rate. O • The types of memory cards suitable for movie recording vary with the settings selected (P 62). • Shots over an hour in length may be recorded across multiple files without interruption. In addition, movies over 4 GB in size will be recorded uninterrupted across multiple files to SD memory cards with capacities 32 GB or less. Technical Notes 12 387 Specifications System Model Product Number Effective pixels Image sensor Storage media Memory card slots File system Image size Technical Notes Lens mount 12 388 FUJIFILM X-S20 FF220002 Approx. 26.1 million 23.5 mm × 15.6 mm (APS-C), X-Trans CMOS 4 sensor with primary color filter Fujifilm-recommended SD/SDHC/SDXC memory cards SD memory card slot (UHS-II compliant) • Still pictures: Compliant with DCF 2.0 • Compressed: Exif 2.32 JPEG-baseline compliant; DPOF compliant; HEIF compliant (4 : 2 : 2, 10-bit) • Uncompressed or compressed using a reversible or non-reversible algorithm: RAW (original RAF format; special-purpose software required); RAW+JPEG available; TIFF (RGB) • Movies: Compliant with HEVC/H.265, and H.264 • Audio (including voice memos): - LPCM (two channels: 24-bit, 48 kHz sampling) - AAC (MP4 recordings only) • Audio (via XLR microphone adapter): - LPCM (two channels: 24-bit, 48 kHz sampling; four channels: 24-bit, 48 kHz sampling) - AAC (MP4 recordings only; two channels: 16-bit, 48 kHz sampling) O 3∶2 (6240 × 4160) O 1∶1 (4160 × 4160) O 16∶9 (6240 × 3512) P 3∶2 (4416 × 2944) P 1∶1 (2944 × 2944) P 16∶9 (4416 × 2488) Q 3∶2 (3120 × 2080) Q 1∶1 (2080 × 2080) Q 16∶9 (3120 × 1760) RAW (6240 × 4160) O panorama: vertical (2160 × 9600)/horizontal (9600 × 1440) P panorama: vertical (2160 × 6400)/horizontal (6400 × 1440) FUJIFILM X mount Specifications System Sensitivity • Still pictures: Standard output sensitivity equivalent to ISO 160–12800 in increments of ⁄ EV; AUTO 1–3; extended output sensitivity equivalent to ISO 80, 100, 125, 25600, or 51200 • Movies: Standard output sensitivity equivalent to ISO 160–12800 in increments of ⁄ EV; AUTO; extended output sensitivity equivalent to ISO 25600 Metering 256-segment through-the-lens (TTL) metering; MULTI, SPOT, AVERAGE, CENTER WEIGHTED Exposure control Programmed AE (with program shift); shutter-priority AE; aperture-priority AE; manual exposure Exposure compensation • Still pictures: −5 EV – +5 EV in increments of ⁄ EV • Movies: −2 EV–+2 EV in increments of ⁄ EV Shutter speed • MECHANICAL SHUTTER ⁃ Modes P and A: 30 s to ¼ s ⁃ Modes S and M: 15 min. to ¼ s ⁃ Bulb: Max. 60 min. • ELECTRONIC SHUTTER ⁃ Modes P and A: 30 s to ⁄ s ⁃ Modes S and M: 15 min. to ⁄ s ⁃ Bulb: Fixed at 1 s • MECHANICAL + ELECTRONIC ⁃ Modes P and A: 30 s to ⁄ s ⁃ Modes S and M: 15 min. to ⁄ s ⁃ Bulb: Max. 60 min. Technical Notes 12 389 System Continuous CONTINUOUS MODE 30fps(1.25X CROP) * 20fps(1.25X CROP) * 10fps(1.25X CROP) * 20fps * 10fps * 8.0fps 5.0fps 4.0fps 3.0fps Available frame advance rates (JPEG) 30 20 10 20 10 8.0 5.0 4.0 3.0 * Available with electronic shutter only. O The frame rate and number of frames per burst var- ies with shooting conditions and type of memory card used. Focus • Mode: Single or continuous AF; manual focus with focus ring • Autofocus system: Intelligent hybrid AF (TTL contrast-detect/ phase-detection AF) • Focus-area selection: SINGLE POINT, ZONE, WIDE/TRACKING, ALL White balance Self-timer Flash Technical Notes Flash mode 12 390 Auto (WHITE PRIORITY, AUTO, AMBIENCE PRIORITY), Custom 1, Custom 2, Custom 3, color temperature selection, direct sunlight, shade, daylight fluorescent, warm white fluorescent, cool white fluorescent, incandescent, underwater • Still pictures: Off, 2 sec., 10 sec. • Movies: Off, 3 sec., 5 sec., 10 sec. • Type: Manual pop-up flash unit • Guide number: Approx. 5/16 (ISO 100, m/ft.) • MODE: TTL MODE (FLASH AUTO, STANDARD, SLOW SYNC.), MANUAL, COMMANDER, OFF • SYNC. MODE: 1ST CURTAIN, 2ND CURTAIN, AUTO FP (highspeed sync) • RED EYE REMOVAL: L FLASH, OFF Specifications System Hot shoe Provided (supports TTL flash control); supports sync speeds as fast as ⁄ s Sync contact X contact; supports sync speeds as fast as ⁄ s Sync terminal – Electronic viewfinder 0.39-in., 2360k-dot OLED viewfinder; magnification 0.62× with 50 mm lens (35 mm format equivalent) at infinity and diopter (EVF) set to −1.0 m−1; diagonal angle of view approximately 31° (horizontal angle of view approximately 26°) • Diopter adjustment: −4 to +2 m−1 • Eyepoint: Approximately 17.5 mm LCD monitor 3.0-in/7.6 cm, 1840k-dot color touch screen LCD monitor, Vari-angle LCD monitor Movies • Movie size: J 3:2, V 16∶9, d 17∶9, W 16∶9, W 17∶9, (with stereo sound) S 16∶9, S 17∶9 • Frame rate: 59.94P, 50P, 29.97P, 25P, 24P, 23.98P • Recording/output format: - H.265 (10-bit MOV 4 : 2 : 2/4 : 2 : 0; 360, 200, 100, or 50 Mbps) - H.264 (8-bit MOV/MP4 4 : 2 : 0; 360, 200, 100, or 50Mbps) - HDMI output supported (RAW output supported with Atomos and Blackmagic Design external recorders; 8-bit 4 : 2 : 2/10-bit 4 : 2 : 2) High-speed movies • Movie size: W 16∶9, W 17∶9 • Frame advance rate: 240P, 200P, 120P, 100P Technical Notes Input/output terminals Microphone connector ⌀3.5 mm mini-stereo jack Headphone jack socket ⌀3.5 mm mini-stereo jack Remote release connector ⌀3.5 mm 3-pole mini jack Digital input/output USB connector: USB Type-C® USB 10 Gbps HDMI output HDMI Micro connector (type D) 12 391 Power supply/other Power supply NP-W235 rechargeable battery (supplied with camera) Battery life • Battery type: NP-W235 • Lens: XF35mmF1.4 R • External flash units: Disabled • Shooting mode: Mode P Number of shots PERFORMANCE LCD EVF Approx. 570 Approx. 530 BOOST 1 NORMAL Approx. 750 Approx. 750 ECONOMY Approx. 800 Approx. 750 Total length of footage that can be recorded on a single charge Continuance Actual battery life battery life of Mode of movie capture movie capture Approx. 85 minutes Approx. 120 minutes J2 Approx. 80 minutes Approx. 110 minutes V3 Approx. 95 minutes Approx. 150 minutes W3 High-speed movies 4 Approx. 95 minutes – 1 EVF FRAME RATE PRIORITY (100P) selected EVF/LCD BOOST SETTING. 2 At a frame rate of 29.97 fps. 3 At a frame rate of 59.94 fps. 4 At a frame rate of 120 fps. Technical Notes CIPA standard. Measured using battery supplied with camera and SD memory card. Note: Battery endurance varies with battery charge level and the figures given above are not guaranteed. Battery endurance will decline at low temperatures. 12 392 Specifications Power supply/other Camera size 127.7 mm × 85.1 mm × 65.4 mm (32.9 mm excluding projections, (W × H × D) measured at thinnest part)/5.03 in. × 3.35 in. × 2.57 in. (1.30 in.) Camera weight Approx. 410 g/14.5 oz., excluding battery, accessories, and memory card Shooting weight Approx. 491 g/17.3 oz., including battery and memory card Operating conditions • Temperature: 0 °C to +40 °C/+32 °F to +104 °F • Humidity: 10% to 80% (no condensation) Wireless transmitter Wireless LAN Standards IEEE 802.11a/b/g/n/ac (standard wireless protocol) Operating frequency • Israel, Indonesia : 2,412 MHz–2,462 MHz (11 channels) (center frequency) • USA, Canada, Brazil, China, India, Korea, Malaysia : 2,412 MHz–2,462 MHz (11 channels) : 5,180 MHz–5,320 MHz (W52, W53) : 5,745 MHz–5,825 MHz (UNII-3) • European Union, Japan, United Kingdom, Australia, Norway, New zealand, Turkey, Hong Kong, Philippines, Vietnam, Singapore, Thailand, UAE, Russia, Taiwan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman, Egypt, Iran, Kuwait, Lebanon, Uzbekistan : 2,412 MHz–2,462 MHz (11 channels) : 5,180 MHz–5,320 MHz (W52, W53) : 5,500 MHz–5,700 MHz (W56) Access protocols Infrastructure Bluetooth® Standards Bluetooth version 4.2 (Bluetooth Low Energy) Operating frequency 2,402 MHz–2,480 MHz (center frequency) Technical Notes 12 393 Specifications NP-W235 rechargeable battery Nominal voltage 7.2 V Nominal capacity 2350 mAh Rating capacity 2200 mAh Operating 0 °C to +40 °C/+32 °F to +104 °F temperature 38.92 mm × 22.8 mm × 52.26 mm/ Dimensions 1.5 in. × 0.9 in. × 2.1 in. (W × H × D) Weight Approx. 79 g/2.8 oz. AC-5VJ AC power adapter Manufacturer Address Model name Rated input Input capacity Rated output Average active efficiency Efficiency at load 10% No-load power consumption Operating temperature Weight Dongguan Yingiu Power Co.,Ltd. No.6 Yongxing Road, Shayao Village, Shijie Town, 523292 Dongguan City, Guangdong Province, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA AC-5VJ 100 V – 240 V AC, 50/60 Hz Max. 50 VA DC5.0V 3.0A 15.0W 84.8 % 84.2 % 0.02 W 0 °C to +40 °C/+32 °F to +104 °F Approx. 45 g ± 2 g/1.6 oz. ± 0.1 oz. O Specifications and performance are subject to change without notice. Fujifilm will not be held liable for any errors this manual may contain. The appearance of the product may differ from that described in this manual. Technical Notes 12 394 MEMO 395 MEMO 396 MEMO 397 7-3, AKASAKA 9-CHOME, MINATO-KU, TOKYO 107-0052, JAPAN https://fujifilm-x.com
advertisement