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- 29842-9425-19 - D80 Digital SLR Camera
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- 162 Pages
Nikon 29842-9425-19 - D80 Digital SLR Camera manual
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.4# %N .OREPRODUCTIONINANYFORMOFTHISMANUALINWHOLEORINPARTEXCEPTFOR BRIEFQUOTATIONINCRITICALARTICLESORREVIEWSMAYBEMADEWITHOUTWRITTEN AUTHORIZATIONFROM.)+/.#/20/2!4)/. 4HE.IKON'UIDETO$IGITAL0HOTOGRAPHY WITHTHE $)')4!,#!-%2! %N 0RINTEDIN4HAILAND -"! 3"+ Where to Find It Find what you’re looking for from: The Table of Contents See pages v–vi Find items by function or menu name. The Q&A Index See pages vii–ix Know what you want to do but don’t know the function name? Find it from the “question and answer” index. The Index See pages 147–149 Search by key word. Error Messages See pages 132–133 If a warning is displayed in the control panel, viewfinder, or monitor, find the solution here. Troubleshooting See pages 129–131 Camera behaving unexpectedly? Find the solution here. Digitutor “Digitutor,” a series of “watch and learn” manuals in movie form, is available at the following website: http://www.nikondigitutor.com/index_eng.html Help Use the camera‘s on-board help feature for help on menu items and other topics. See page 9 for details. Introduction Tutorial Photography and Playback More on Photography (All Modes) P, S, A, and M Modes Reference More on Playback Connecting to a Television, Computer, or Printer Playback Options: The Playback Menu Shooting Options: The Shooting Menu Menu Guide Custom Settings Basic Camera Settings: The Setup Menu Creating Retouched Copies: The Retouch Menu Technical Notes i For Your Safety To prevent damage to your Nikon product or injury to yourself or to others, read the following safety precautions in their entirety before using this equipment. Keep these safety instructions where all those who use the product will read them. The consequences that could result from failure to observe the precautions listed in this section are indicated by the following symbol: This icon marks warnings. To prevent possible injury, read all warnings before using this Nikon product. WARNINGS Keep the sun out of the frame Keep the sun well out of the frame when shooting backlit subjects. Sunlight focused into the camera when the sun is in or close to the frame could cause a fire. Do not look at the sun through the viewfinder Viewing the sun or other strong light source through the viewfinder could cause permanent visual impairment. Using the viewfinder diopter control When operating the viewfinder diopter control with your eye to the viewfinder, care should be taken not to put your finger in your eye accidentally. Turn off immediately in the event of malfunction Should you notice smoke or an unusual smell coming from the equipment or AC adapter (available separately), unplug the AC adapter and remove the battery immediately, taking care to avoid burns. Continued operation could result in injury. After removing the battery, take the equipment to a Nikon-authorized service center for inspection. Do not disassemble Touching the product’s internal parts could result in injury. In the event of malfunction, the product should be repaired only by a qualified technician. Should the product break open as the result of a fall or other accident, remove the battery and/or AC adapter and then take the product to a Nikon-authorized service center for inspection. Do not use in the presence of flammable gas Do not use electronic equipment in the presence of flammable gas, as this could result in explosion or fire. Keep out of reach of children Failure to observe this precaution could result in injury. Do not place the strap around the neck of an infant or child Placing the camera strap around the neck of an infant or child could result in strangulation. Observe proper precautions when handling batteries Batteries may leak or explode if improperly handled. ii For Your Safety • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Observe the following precautions when handling batteries for use in this product: Use only batteries approved for use in this equipment. Do not short or disassemble the battery. Be sure the product is off before replacing the battery. If you are using an AC adapter, be sure it is unplugged. Do not attempt to insert the battery upside down or backwards. Do not expose the battery to flame or to excessive heat. Do not immerse in or expose to water. Replace the terminal cover when transporting the battery. Do not transport or store the battery with metal objects such as necklaces or hairpins. Batteries are prone to leakage when fully discharged. To avoid damage to the product, be sure to remove the battery when no charge remains. When the battery is not in use, attach the terminal cover and store in a cool, dry place. The battery may be hot immediately after use or when the product has been used on battery power for an extended period. Before removing the battery turn the camera off and allow the battery to cool. Discontinue use immediately should you notice any changes in the battery, such as discoloration or deformation. Observe proper precautions when handling the quick charger Keep dry. Failure to observe this precaution could result in fire or electric shock. Dust on or near the metal parts of the plug should be removed with a dry cloth. Continued use could result in fire. Do not handle the power cable or go near the charger during thunderstorms. Failure to observe this precaution could result in electric shock. Do not damage, modify, or forcibly tug or bend the power cable. Do not place it under heavy objects or expose it to heat or flame. Should the insulation be damaged and the wires become exposed, take the power cable to a Nikon-authorized service representative for inspection. Failure to observe this precaution could result in fire or electric shock. • Do not handle the plug or charger with wet hands. ROMs on an audio CD player could cause hearing loss Failure to observe this precaution could result in elecor damage the equipment. tric shock. Observe caution when using the flash Use appropriate cables Do not operate the flash with the flash window When connecting cables to the input and output touching a person or object. Failure to observe this jacks, use only the cables provided or sold by Nikon precaution could result in burns or fire. for the purpose to maintain compliance with product Using the flash close to the subject’s eyes could cause regulations. temporary visual impairment. Particular care should be observed when photographing infants, when the CD-ROMs flash should be no less than one meter (39 in.) from CD-ROMs containing software or manuals should not the subject. be played back on audio CD equipment. Playing CDAvoid contact with liquid crystal Should the monitor break, care should be taken to avoid injury due to broken glass and to prevent the liquid crystal from the monitor touching the skin or entering the eyes or mouth. Notices • No part of the manuals included with this product may be reproduced, transmitted, transcribed, stored in a retrieval system, or translated into any language in any form, by any means, without Nikon’s prior written permission. • Nikon reserves the right to change the specifications of the hardware and software described in these manuals at any time and without prior notice. • Nikon will not be held liable for any damages resulting from the use of this product. • While every effort has been made to ensure that the information in these manuals is accurate and complete, we would appreciate it were you to bring any errors or omissions to the attention of the Nikon representative in your area (address provided separately). Notices for Customers in the U.S.A. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Radio Frequency Interference Statement 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/television technician for help. D80 CAUTIONS Modifications The FCC requires the user be notified that any changes or modifications made to this device that are not expressly approved by Nikon Corporation may void the user’s authority to operate the equipment. Interface Cables Use the interface cables sold or provided by Nikon for your equipment. Using other interface cables may exceed the limits of Class B Part 15 of the FCC rules. Notice for Customers in the State of California WARNING: Handling the cord on this product may expose you to lead, a chemical known to the State of California to cause birth defects or other reproductive harm. Wash hands after handling. Nikon Inc., 1300 Walt Whitman Road, Melville, New York 11747-3064, U.S.A. Tel.: 631-547-4200 Notices for Customers in Canada CAUTION This class B digital apparatus meets all requirements of the Canadian Interference Causing Equipment Regulations. ATTENTION Cet appareil numérique de la classe B respecte toutes les exigences du Règlement sur le matériel brouilleur du Canada. Notices iii Symbol for Separate Collection in European Countries This symbol indicates that this product is to be collected separately. The following apply only to users in European countries: • This product is designated for separate collection at an appropriate collection point. Do not dispose of as household waste. • For more information, contact the retailer or the local authorities in charge of waste management. Notice Concerning Prohibition of Copying or Reproduction Note that simply being in possession of material that has been digitally copied or reproduced by means of a scanner, digital camera, or other device may be punishable by law. • Items prohibited by law from being copied or reproduced Do not copy or reproduce paper money, coins, securities, government bonds, or local government bonds, even if such copies or reproductions are stamped “Sample.” The copying or reproduction of paper money, coins, or securities which are circulated in a foreign country is prohibited. Unless the prior permission of the government has been obtained, the copying or reproduction or unused postage stamps or post cards issued by the government is prohibited. The copying or reproduction of stamps issued by the government and of certified documents stipulated by law is prohibited. • Cautions on certain copies and reproductions The government has issued cautions on copies or reproductions of securities issued by private companies (shares, bills, checks, gift certificates, etc.), commuter passes, or coupon tickets, except when a minimum of necessary copies are to be provided for business use by a company. Also, do not copy or reproduce passports issued by the government, licenses issued by public agencies and private groups, ID cards, and tickets, such as passes and meal coupons. • Comply with copyright notices The copying or reproduction of copyrighted creative works such as books, music, paintings, woodcuts, prints, maps, drawings, movies, and photographs is governed by national and international copyright laws. Do not use this product for the purpose of making illegal copies or to infringe copyright laws. Disposing of Data Storage Devices Please note that deleting images or formatting memory cards or other data storage devices does not completely erase the original image data. Deleted files can sometimes be recovered from discarded storage devices using commercially available software, potentially resulting in the malicious use of personal image data. Ensuring the privacy of such data is the user’s responsibility. Before discarding a data storage device or transferring ownership to another person, erase all data using commercial deletion software, or format the device and then completely refill it with images containing no private information (for example, pictures of empty sky). Be sure to also replace any pictures selected for preset white balance. Care should be taken to avoid injury when physically destroying data storage devices. Trademark Information Macintosh, Mac OS, and QuickTime are registered trademarks of Apple.Inc. Microsoft, Windows, and Windows Vista are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and/or other countries. The SD logo is a trademark of the SD Card Association. The SDHC logo is a trademark. Adobe, Acrobat, and Adobe Reader are registered trademarks of Adobe Systems Inc. PictBridge is a trademark. All other trade names mentioned in this manual or the other documentation provided with your Nikon product are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders. iv Notices Table of Contents For Your Safety ................................................................ ii Notices .............................................................................. iii Q & A Index ....................................................................vii Introduction .................................................. ..................................................1 1 Getting to Know the Camera.................................... 2 Using Camera Menus ...................................................9 First Steps ...................................................................... 11 Attaching a Lens ......................................................................... 11 Charging and Inserting the Battery ................................ 12 Basic Setup ..................................................................................... 14 Inserting Memory Cards ........................................................ 15 Adjusting Viewfinder Focus ................................................. 17 Tutorial ........................................................ ........................................................18 18 “Point-and-Shoot” Photography ( Mode) ...... 19 Creative Photography (Digital Vari-Programs) ... 24 Portrait ....................................................................................... 25 Landscape ............................................................................... 25 Close up .................................................................................... 25 SportsAutofocus .................................................................. 25 Night landscape................................................................... 25 Night portrait ......................................................................... 25 Basic Playback .............................................................. 26 Reference .................................................... ....................................................27 27 More on Photography (All Modes) ..............28 .............. 28 Focus ............................................................................... 28 Autofocus ........................................................................................ 28 Focus Area Selection ................................................................ 30 Focus Lock ...................................................................................... 31 Manual Focus ................................................................................ 32 Image Quality and Size ............................................. 33 Image Quality ............................................................................... 34 Image Size ....................................................................................... 35 Choosing a Shooting Mode .................................... 36 Self-Timer Mode ( ) ................................................................. 37 Using a Remote Control ( ) ................................................ 38 Using the Built-in Flash ............................................. 40 ISO Sensitivity .............................................................. 43 Two-Button Reset ....................................................... 44 P, S, A, and M Modes .................................... ....................................45 45 Mode P (Programmed Auto)................................... 47 Mode S (Shutter-Priority Auto) .............................. 48 Mode A (Aperture-Priority Auto) .......................... 49 Mode M (Manual) ....................................................... 50 Exposure ........................................................................ 52 Metering .......................................................................................... 52 Autoexposure Lock ................................................................... 53 Exposure Compensation ....................................................... 54 Flash Exposure Compensation .......................................... 55 Bracketing ....................................................................................... 56 White Balance .............................................................. 58 Fine-Tuning White Balance................................................... 58 Choosing a Color Temperature.......................................... 59 Preset White Balance ................................................................ 59 More on Playback ........................................ ........................................61 61 Viewing Photographs on the Camera ................. 61 Photo Information ..................................................................... 62 Viewing Multiple Images: Thumbnail Playback ....... 63 Taking a Closer Look: Playback Zoom............................ 64 Protecting Photographs from Deletion ........................ 65 Deleting Individual Photographs ..................................... 65 Connecting to a TV, Computer, or Printer ... ...66 66 Viewing Photographs on TV ................................... 66 Connecting to a Computer ..................................... 67 Before Connecting the Camera......................................... 67 Connecting the USB Cable ................................................... 67 Printing Photographs ................................................ 69 Printing Via Direct USB Connection ................................ 69 Menu Guide ................................................. .................................................74 74 Playback Options: The Playback Menu ............... 74 Delete ................................................................................................ 74 Playback Folder ............................................................................ 75 Rotate Tall ........................................................................................ 75 Slide Show ...................................................................................... 75 Hide Image ..................................................................................... 78 Print Set ............................................................................................ 78 Shooting Options: The Shooting Menu .............. 79 Optimize Image (P, S, A, and M Modes) ........................ 79 Image Quality (All Modes) .................................................... 81 Image Size (All Modes) ............................................................ 81 White Balance (P, S, A, and M Modes) ............................ 82 ISO Sensitivity (All Modes) .................................................... 83 Long Exp. NR (All Modes) ...................................................... 83 High ISO NR (All Modes) ........................................................ 83 Multiple Exposure (P, S, A, and M Modes).................... 84 Custom Settings .......................................................... 86 R: Reset .............................................................................................. 86 1: Beep (All Modes) .................................................................... 86 2: AF-Area Mode (All Modes) .............................................. 87 3: Center AF Area (All Modes) ............................................. 87 4: AF-Assist (All Modes Except , , and ) ........ 87 5: No Memory Card? (All Modes) ...................................... 88 6: Image Review (All Modes) ............................................... 88 7: ISO Auto (P, S, A, and M Modes Only)........................ 88 8: Grid Display (All Modes) .................................................... 89 9: Viewfinder Warning (All Modes)................................... 89 10: EV Step (All Modes) ........................................................... 89 11: Exposure Comp. (P, S, A, and M Modes Only).... 89 12: Center-Weighted (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) .... 90 13: Auto BKT Set (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) ........... 90 14: Auto BKT Order (P, S, A, and M Modes Only)...... 91 Table of Contents v 15: Command Dials (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) .... 91 16: FUNC Button (All Modes) .............................................. 92 17: Illumination (All Modes) ................................................. 93 18: AE-L/AF-L (All Modes) ...................................................... 94 19: AE Lock (All Modes) ........................................................... 94 20: Focus Area (All Modes).................................................... 94 21: AF Area Illumination (All Modes) .............................. 95 22: Built-in Flash (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) ............ 95 23: Flash Warning (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) ......... 98 24: Flash Shutter Speed (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) .................................................. 98 25: Auto FP (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) ....................... 98 26: Modeling Flash (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) ...... 98 27: Monitor-Off (All Modes) ................................................. 98 28: Auto Meter-Off (All Modes) .......................................... 99 29: Self-Timer (All Modes) ...................................................... 99 30: Remote On Duration (All Modes) ............................. 99 31: Exp. Delay Mode (All Modes) ...................................... 99 32: MB-D80 Batteries (All Modes) .................................. 100 Basic Camera Settings: The Setup Menu ..........101 CSM / Setup Menu ................................................................. 101 Format Memory Card ........................................................... 102 World Time .................................................................................. 103 LCD Brightness .......................................................................... 103 Video Mode................................................................................. 103 Language ..................................................................................... 103 USB ................................................................................................... 104 Image Comment ..................................................................... 104 Folders ............................................................................................ 105 vi Table of Contents File No. Sequence .................................................................... 106 Mirror Lock-Up .......................................................................... 106 Dust Off Ref Photo .................................................................. 106 Battery Info .................................................................................. 107 Firmware Version ..................................................................... 108 Auto Image Rotation ............................................................. 108 Creating Retouched Copies: The Retouch Menu ...................................................109 D-Lighting .................................................................................... 110 Red-Eye Correction ................................................................ 111 Trim .................................................................................................. 111 Monochrome ............................................................................. 112 Filter Effects ................................................................................. 112 Small Picture ............................................................................... 112 Image Overlay ........................................................................... 114 Technical Notes ........................................ 116 Optional Accessories ...............................................116 Lenses ............................................................................................. 117 Optional Flash Units (Speedlights) ............................... 119 Other Accessories ................................................................... 122 Caring for the Camera .............................................124 Caring for the Camera and Battery: Cautions ........ 127 Troubleshooting........................................................129 Camera Error Messages and Displays ......................... 132 Appendix .....................................................................134 Specifications .............................................................142 Index..............................................................................147 Q & A Index Find what you’re looking for using this “question and answer” index. General Questions Question How do I use the menus? How do I get more information on a menu? What do these indicators mean? What does this warning mean? How many more shots can I take with this card? How much charge does the battery have left? What does “exposure” mean and how does it work? What do I do with the viewfinder eyepiece cap? What optional flash units (Speedlights) can I use? What lenses can I use? What accessories are available for my camera? What memory cards can I use? What software is available for my camera? Who can I ask to repair or inspect my camera? How do I clean the camera or lens? Key phrase Using the menus Help Control panel, viewfinder Camera Error messages and displays Number of exposures remaining Battery level Exposure Self timer, remote control Optional flash units Lenses Accessories for the D80 Approved memory cards Accessories for the D80 Servicing the camera Cleaning the camera Page # 9–10 3, 9 5, 6 132–133 19 19 46 37, 38 119–121 117–118 123 122 123 x, 126 124 Camera Setup Question How do I focus the viewfinder? How do I keep the monitor from turning off? How do I set the clock? How do I set the clock for daylight savings time? How do I change time zones when I travel? How do I adjust monitor brightness? How do I restore default settings? How do I turn off the light on the front of the camera? Can I display a framing grid in the viewfinder? How do I view the control panel in the dark? How do I keep the shutter speed and aperture displays from turning off? How do I change the self timer delay? How do I change the remote delay? How do I keep the camera from beeping? How do I view all the items in the menus? Can I display the menus in a different language? How do I keep the file number from being reset when I insert a new memory card? How do I reset file numbering to 1? Key phrase Viewfinder focus Monitor off Page # 17 98 World time 103 LCD brightness Two-button reset AF-assist illuminator Grid display LCD illuminator 103 44 87 89 3, 93 Auto meter off 99 Self timer Remote control Beep CSM / setup menu Language 99 99 86 101 103 File number sequence 106 Q & A Index vii Taking Photographs Question Is there an easy way to take snapshots? Is there an easy way to take more creative shots? How do I bring out a portrait subject? How can I get good landscape shots? How do I take close ups of small objects? How do I “freeze” a moving subject? How do I shoot scenery at night? Can I include night backgrounds in my portraits? How do I take a lot of photographs quickly? Can I shoot a self-portrait? Is there a remote control for this camera? How do I adjust exposure? How do I freeze or blur moving objects? How do I blur background details? Can I make photos brighter or darker? How do I make a time exposure? How do I use the flash? Can the flash fire automatically when needed? How do I keep the flash from firing? How do I prevent red eye? Can I take pictures under low light without the flash? Can I control how the camera focuses? How do I focus on a moving subject? How do I choose where the camera focuses? Can I change the composition after focusing? How do I improve image quality? How do I take bigger photographs? How can I get more photos on the memory card? Can I take photos at a reduced size for e-mail? viii Q & A Index Key phrase Auto mode Digital Vari-Program modes Portrait mode Landscape mode Close-up mode Sports mode Night landscape mode Night portrait mode Shooting mode Self timer Remote control Exposure; P, S, A, and M modes Mode S (shutter-priority auto) Mode A (aperture-priority auto) Exposure compensation Long time-exposures Page # 19–23 24–25 24, 25 24, 25 24, 25 24, 25 24, 25 24, 25 36 37 38–39 45–51 48 49 54 51 Flash photography, flash mode 40–42 Red-eye reduction ISO sensitivity Autofocus Autofocus mode Focus area Focus lock 41 43 28–29 29 30 31 Image quality and size 33–35 Viewing, Printing, and Retouching Photographs Question Can I view my photographs on the camera? Can I view more information about photos? Key phrase Camera playback Photo info Why parts of my photos blink? Photo info, highlights How do I get rid of an unwanted photo? Can I delete several photos at once? Can I zoom in on pictures to make sure they’re in focus? Can I protect photos from accidental deletion? Is there an automatic playback (“slide show”) option? Can I view my photos on TV? Can I set a slide show to music? How do I copy photos to my computer? How do I print photographs? Can I print photos without a computer? Can I print the date on my photographs? How do I order professional prints? How do I bring out details in shadows? Can I get rid of red eye? Can I crop photographs on the camera? Can I create a monochrome copy of a photograph? Can I create a copy with different colors? Can I make a small copy of a photograph? Can I overlay two photos to make a single image? Deleting individual photos Delete Playback zoom Protect Slide show Television playback Pictmotion Connecting to a computer Printing photographs Printing via USB Time stamp, DPOF Print set D-lighting Red-eye correction Trim Monochrome Filter effects Small picture Image overlay Page # 61, 63 62–63 62–63, 131 26, 65 74 64 65 75–77 66 75–77 67–68 69–73 69–73 71, 73 73 110 111 111 112 112 112–113 114–115 Q & A Index ix Life-Long Learning As part of Nikon’s “Life-Long Learning” commitment to ongoing product support and education, continually-updated information is available on-line at the following sites: • For users in the U.S.A.: http://www.nikonusa.com/ • For users in Europe and Africa: http://www.europe-nikon.com/support • For users in Asia, Oceania, and the Middle East: http://www.nikon-asia.com/ Visit these sites to keep up-to-date with the latest product information, tips, answers to frequentlyasked questions (FAQs), and general advice on digital imaging and photography. Additional information may be available from the Nikon representative in your area. See the following URL for contact information: http://nikonimaging.com/ x Q & A Index Introduction Thank you for your purchase of a Nikon D80 single-lens reflex (SLR) digital camera with interchangeable lenses. This manual has been written to help you enjoy taking pictures with your Nikon digital camera. Read this manual thoroughly before use, and keep it handy when using the product. To make it easier to find the information you need, the following symbols and conventions are used: This icon marks cautions, information that should be read before use to prevent damage to the camera. This icon marks tips, additional information that may be helpful when using the camera. This icon marks notes, information that should be read before using the camera. This icon indicates that more information is available elsewhere in this manual or in the Quick Start Guide. This icon marks settings that can be adjusted using camera menus. This icon marks settings that can be finetuned from the Custom Settings menu. Lens An AF-S DX 18–135 mm f/3.5–5.6G ED Zoom-Nikkor lens ( purposes. 1 2 3 4 145) is used in this manual for illustrative 5 9 1. Focal length scale 2. Focus ring 3. Focal length index 8 7 4. Mounting index: 11 5. Rear cap: 11 6. CPU contacts: 117 6 7. A-M mode switch: 8. Zoom ring: 21 9. Lens cap: 17, 19 11, 32 Introduction 1 Getting to Know the Camera Take a few moments to familiarize yourself with camera controls and displays. You may find it helpful to bookmark this section and refer to it as you read through the rest of the manual. Camera Body 1 23 24 33 25 2 22 32 3 20 26 4 19 21 5 6 31 7 18 17 16 15 14 13 1 Built-in flash ........................................................... 23, 40 2 (flash mode) button ........................................... 40 (flash compensation) ....................................... 55 3 (bracketing) button ....................................56–57 4 Infrared receiver .......................................................... 38 5 Lens mounting index .............................................. 11 6 Eyelet for camera strap .............................................. 8 7 Connector cover ..........................................66, 67, 70 8 USB connector ............................................................. 67 9 Reset switch.................................................................129 10 DC-IN connector for optional EH-5/EH-5a AC adapter....................................................................123 11 Video connector ......................................................... 66 12 Remote cord connector.......................................123 13 Focus-mode selector ....................................... 28, 32 14 Lens release button ................................................. 11 15 Lens mount .................................................................... 11 16 Mirror ....................................................................106, 125 17 Depth-of-field preview button .......................... 49 18 Grip...................................................................................... 21 19 Sub-command dial ........................................... 10, 91 20 FUNC. button............................................................... 92 2 Introduction: Getting to Know the Camera 27 8 28 9 30 10 11 29 12 21 Eyelet for camera strap .............................................. 8 22 AF-assist illuminator ......................................... 28, 87 Self-timer lamp .................................................... 37, 38 Red-eye reduction lamp ........................................ 39 23 Shutter-release button.................................... 22, 23 24 Power switch ......................................................... 11, 19 Illuminator switch ......................................................... 3 25 (exposure compensation) button ........... 54 ● (reset button) .......................................................... 44 26 (shooting mode) button .................................. 36 Single/continuous mode ...................................... 36 Self-timer mode .......................................................... 37 Remote control mode............................................. 38 27 (AF mode) button................................................. 29 ● (reset button) .......................................................... 44 28 Control panel ................................................................... 5 29 Accessory shoe cover ............................................119 30 Accessory shoe (for optional flash unit) .....119 31 (focal plane mark).............................................. 32 32 Mode dial .................................................47, 48, 49, 50 33 (metering mode) button .............................. 52 (format) button ................................................. 16 19 18 17 16 1 20 21 2 3 4 6 7 8 15 14 13 12 5 1 2 3 4 5 6 11 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 9 16 10 17 Viewfinder eyepiece .................................................... 8 Viewfinder eyepiece cup .......................... 6, 17, 21 Diopter adjustment control................................. 17 (AE-L/AF-L) button ..................................... 31, 94 DK-5 viewfinder eyepiece cap .............................. 8 Main command dial ......................................... 10, 91 18 19 20 21 Memory card slot cover ......................................... 15 Focus selector lock .................................................... 30 Memory card access lamp............................ 15, 23 button .......................................................................... 9 Battery-chamber cover latch ............................. 13 Battery-chamber cover.......................................... 13 Multi selector * Tripod socket (playback zoom) button................................. 64 QUAL (image quality/size) button.............. 34, 35 (thumbnail) button ........................................... 63 ISO (ISO sensitivity) button .................................... 43 (help/protect) button ................................. 9, 65 WB (white balance) button ................................... 58 (menu) button......................................................... 9 (playback) button ....................................... 26, 61 Monitor ........................................................................ 9, 26 (delete) button ............................................ 26, 65 (format) button ................................................. 16 * Multi selector The multi selector is used for menu navigation and to control the display of photo information during playback. View more photo info Move cursor up View previous photo Return to previous menu Cancel Playback ( 61) Menu navigation ( 9) View next photo Display sub-menu Make selection View more photo info Move cursor down Help For help on the current mode or menu item, press the button at the button is bottom left corner of the monitor. Help is displayed while the pressed; to scroll the display, press the multi selector up or down. Help is available in (auto) and Digital Vari-Program modes or when a icon is displayed in the bottom left corner of the monitor. The LCD Illuminator Holding the power switch in the position activates the exposure meters and the control panel backlight (LCD illuminator), allowing the display to be read in the dark. After the power switch is released, the illuminator will remain active while the exposure meters are active or until the shutter is released. Introduction: Getting to Know the Camera 3 The Mode Dial The D80 offers a choice of the following eleven shooting modes: Advanced Modes (Exposure Modes) Select these modes for full control over camera settings. P — Programmed auto ( 47): Camera chooses shutter speed and aperture, user controls other settings. S — Shutter-priority auto ( 48): Choose fast shutter speeds to freeze action, slow shutter speeds to suggest motion by blurring moving objects. A — Aperture-priority auto ( 49): Adjust aperture to soften background details or increase depth-of-field to bring both main subject and background into focus. M — Manual ( 50): Match shutter speed and aperture to your creative intent. Point-and-Shoot Modes (Digital Vari-Programs) Selecting a Digital Vari-Program automatically optimizes settings to suit the selected scene, making creative photography as simple as rotating the mode dial. — Auto ( 19): Camera adjusts settings automatically to produce optimal results with “point-and-shoot” simplicity. Recommended for first-time users of digital cameras. — Portrait ( 24, 25): Shoot portraits with background in soft focus. — Landscape ( 24, 25): Preserve details in landscape shots. 4 Introduction: Getting to Know the Camera — Close up ( 24, 25): Take vivid close-ups of flowers, insects, and other small objects. — Sports ( 24, 25): Freeze motion for dynamic sports shots. — Night landscape ( 24, 25): Take landscape shots at night. — Night portrait ( 24, 25): Shoot portraits against a dimly-lit backdrop. Control Panel 1 2 11 3 10 4 9 12 23 13 22 14 21 20 8 15 7 16 19 17 18 5 6 1 Shutter speed ....................................................... 48, 50 Exposure compensation value .......................... 54 Flash compensation value.................................... 55 ISO sensitivity ................................................................ 43 White balance fine-tuning, or color temperature.............................................. 58, 59 Number of shots in bracketing sequence .....................................................................................56, 140 2 ISO sensitivity indicator .......................................... 43 ISO AUTO indicator ................................................... 43 3 Battery indicator ......................................................... 19 4 Flash sync mode ................................................. 40, 41 5 Image quality ................................................................ 34 6 Image size ....................................................................... 35 7 White balance mode ............................................... 58 8 Number of exposures remaining ..................... 19 Number of shots remaining before memory buffer fills .................................................... 36 PC mode indicator..................................................... 68 Preset white balance recording indicator ... 60 9 “K” (appears when memory remains for over 1000 exposures) 10 Shooting mode ........................................................... 36 Self-timer/remote control mode .............. 37, 38 11 Aperture (f-number) ......................................... 49, 50 Bracketing increment .............................................. 56 PC connection indicator ........................................ 68 12 Exposure compensation indicator .................. 54 13 Flash compensation indicator............................ 55 14 Flexible program indicator ................................... 47 15 Focus area ............................................................... 30, 87 AF-area mode ....................................................... 30, 87 16 AF mode .......................................................................... 29 17 Bracketing progress indicator............................. 56 18 Metering mode ........................................................... 52 19 Multiple exposure indicator ................................ 84 20 Black-and-white indicator ..................................... 81 21 “Beep” indicator ........................................................... 86 22 “Clock not set” indicator ............................103, 132 23 Bracketing indicator ................................................. 56 Large-Capacity Memory Cards When enough memory remains on the memory card to record a thousand or more pictures at current settings, the number of exposures remaining will be shown in thousands, rounded down to the nearest hundred (e.g., if there is room for approximately 1,260 exposures, the exposure count display will show 1.2 K). Introduction: Getting to Know the Camera 5 The Viewfinder Display 1 6 2 7 If the battery is totally exhausted or not inserted, the display in the viewfinder will dim. The viewfinder display will return to normal when a fully-charged battery is inserted. 8 3 9 10 11 4 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 5 19 1 Framing grid (displayed when On is selected for Custom Setting 8 (Grid display)) ........... 89 2 8-mm (0.31 in.) reference circle for centerweighted metering ........................................... 52, 90 3 “No memory card” warning 1 .....................15, 133 4 Battery indicator 1 ....................................................... 19 5 Black-and-white indicator 1................................... 81 6 Focus brackets (focus area) ...................19, 21, 30 7 Normal-frame focus brackets (focus area) ............................................................. 21, 87 8 Wide-frame focus brackets (focus area) ....... 87 9 Focus indicator ............................................................ 22 10 Flash value (FV) lock ................................................. 94 11 Autoexposure (AE) lock .......................................... 94 12 Shutter speed ....................................................... 48, 50 13 Aperture (f-number) ......................................... 48, 50 1. Can be hidden with Custom Setting 9 ( 20 21 22 14 Electronic analog exposure display ................ 50 Exposure compensation ........................................ 54 15 Flash compensation indicator............................ 55 16 Exposure compensation indicator .................. 54 17 Number of exposures remaining ..................... 19 Number of shots remaining before memory buffer fills .................................................... 36 Preset white balance recording indicator ... 60 Exposure compensation value .......................... 54 Flash compensation value.................................... 55 PC connection indicator ........................................ 68 18 Flash-ready indicator................................................ 23 19 Auto ISO sensitivity indicator .............................. 43 20 Battery indicator ......................................................... 19 21 Bracketing indicator ................................................. 56 22 “K” (appears when memory remains for over 1000 exposures).................................................. 5 89) The Control Panel and Viewfinder The response times and brightness of the control panel and viewfinder may vary with temperature. Owing to the characteristics of this type of display, you may notice fine lines radiating outward from the selected focus area. This is normal and does not indicate a malfunction. 6 Introduction: Getting to Know the Camera Supplied Accessories The MH-18a Quick Charger ( 12) The MH-18a is for use with the supplied EN-EL3e battery. AC adapter plug CHARGE lamp Wall plug (shape varies with country of sale) AC inlet The EN-EL3e Rechargeable Li-ion Battery ( The EN-EL3e is for use with the D80. 12, 13) Negative terminal Signal contact Positive terminal Terminal cover The use of third-party rechargeable Li-ion batteries not bearing the Nikon holographic seal shown above could interfere with normal operation of the camera or result in the batteries overheating, igniting, rupturing, or leaking. Use Only Nikon Brand Electronic Accessories Nikon cameras are designed to the highest standards and include complex electronic circuitry. Only Nikon brand electronic accessories (including lenses, Speedlights, battery chargers, batteries, and AC adapters) certified by Nikon specifically for use with this Nikon digital camera are engineered and proven to operate within the operational and safety requirements of this electronic circuitry. THE USE OF NON-NIKON ELECTRONIC ACCESSORIES COULD DAMAGE THE CAMERA AND MAY VOID YOUR NIKON WARRANTY. For more information about Nikon brand accessories, contact an authorized Nikon dealer. Introduction: Getting to Know the Camera 7 The Camera Strap Attach the camera strap as shown below. The BM-7 LCD Monitor Cover A clear plastic cover is provided with the camera to keep the monitor clean and protect it when the camera is not in use. To attach the cover, insert the projection on the top of the cover into the matching indentation above the camera monitor () and press the bottom of the cover until it clicks into place (). To remove the cover, hold the camera firmly and pull the bottom of the cover gently until outwards as shown at right. The DK-21 Viewfinder Eyepiece Cup Before attaching the DK-5 viewfinder eyepiece cap and other viewfinder accessories ( 122), remove the viewfinder eyepiece cup by placing your fingers underneath the flanges at either side and sliding it off as shown at right. 8 Introduction: Getting to Know the Camera Using Camera Menus Most shooting, playback, and setup options can be accessed from the camera menus. To view the menus, press the button. Choose from playback, shooting, Custom Settings, setup, and retouch menus (see below) Slider shows position in current menu Current setting for each option is shown by icon If “?” icon is displayed, help for the current item can be viewed by pressing button Menu Playback Shooting Custom Settings Setup Retouch Current menu item is highlighted Description Adjust playback settings and manage photos ( 74). Adjust shooting settings ( 79). Personalize camera settings ( 86). Format memory cards and perform basic camera setup ( 101). Create retouched copies of existing photographs ( 109). The multi selector and OK button are used to navigate the camera menus. Move cursor up Increase number ▲ ▲ ▼ Return to previous menu Display sub-menu ▼ Move cursor down Decrease number Press OK to select highlighted option. Introduction: Using Camera Menus 9 To modify menu settings: 1 2 Display menus. Highlight icon for current menu. 3 Select menu. 4 5 Position cursor in selected menu. 6 Highlight menu item. 7 Display options. 8 Highlight option. Menu items that are displayed in gray are not currently available. Make selection. Press the shutter-release button halfway to exit the menus and return to shooting mode ( 19, 28). The monitor will turn off. Using the Command Dials The main command dial can be used to move the cursor up and down, the sub-command dial to move the cursor left and right. The sub-command dial can not be used to make a selection. 10 Introduction: Using Camera Menus First Steps Attaching a Lens Care should be taken to prevent dust from entering the camera when the lens is removed. 1 Turn the camera off. 2 Remove the rear cap from the lens. Remove the camera body cap. Keeping the mounting index on the lens aligned with the 3 mounting index on the camera body, position the lens in the camera’s bayonet mount and rotate the lens in the direction shown until it clicks into place. If the lens is equipped with an A-M or M/A-M switch, select A (autofocus) or M/A (autofocus with manual priority). Detaching Lenses Be sure the camera is off when removing or exchanging lenses. To remove the lens, press and hold the lens-release button while turning the lens clockwise. After removing the lens, replace the camera body cap and rear lens cover. Aperture Ring If the lens is equipped with an aperture ring ( f-number). See the lens manual for details. 45, 117), lock aperture at the minimum setting (highest Introduction: First Steps 11 Charging and Inserting the Battery The supplied EN-EL3e battery is not charged at shipment. Charge the battery using the supplied MH-18a battery charger as described below. 1 Charge the battery. Liio n BA TT ER Y PA CK 1.1 Remove the terminal cover from the battery. 1.2 Connect the power cord to the charger and plug it in. 1.3 Place the battery in the charger. The CHARGE lamp will blink as the battery charges. About two and a quarter hours are required for an exhausted battery to fully charge. 1.4 Charging is complete when the CHARGE lamp stops blinking. Remove the battery from the charger and unplug the charger. EN-EL3e Rechargeable Li-ion Batteries The EN-EL3e shares information with compatible devices. The camera uses this information to display the battery charge state in six levels in the control panel and to show the battery charge state, remaining battery life, and number of pictures taken since the battery was last charged in the setup menu Battery Info display ( 107). 12 Introduction: First Steps 2 Insert the battery. 2.1 After confirming that the camera is off, open the battery chamber cover. 2.2 Insert a fully charged battery as shown at right. Close the battery chamber cover. The Battery and Charger Read and follow the warnings and cautions on pages ii–iii and 127–128 of this manual, together with any warnings and instructions provided by the battery manufacturer. Use only EN-EL3e batteries. The D80 is not compatible with the MS-D70 CR2 battery holder or with EN-EL3 or EN-EL3a batteries for D100, D70-series, or D50 cameras. Do not use the battery at ambient temperatures below 0 °C (32 °F) or above 40 °C (104 °F). During charging, the temperature should be in the vicinity of 5–35 °C (41–95 °F). For best results, charge the battery at temperatures above 20 °C (68 °F). Battery capacity may drop if the battery is used at a temperature below the temperature at which it was charged. If the battery is charged at a temperature below 5 °C (41 °F), the battery life indicator in the Battery Info display may show a temporary decrease. Removing the Battery Turn the camera off before removing the battery. To avoid shorting the battery, replace the terminal cover when the battery is not in use. Introduction: First Steps 13 Basic Setup The first time the camera is turned on, the language selection dialog shown in Step 1 will be displayed in the monitor. Follow the steps below to choose a language and set the time and date. 1 2 Turn camera on. 3 Select language. 4 Display map of world time zones. 5 Select local time zone. 6 Display daylight saving time options. 7 Highlight On if daylight saving time is in effect. 8 Display date menu. 9 Press multi selector left or right to select item, up or down to change. To change the order in which the year, month, and day are displayed, select World time > Date format from the setup menu ( 103). Set clock and return to shooting mode. Monitor will turn off automatically. Using Camera Menus The language menu is only displayed automatically the first time menus are displayed. See “Using Camera Menus” ( 9–10) for information on normal menu operation. 14 Introduction: First Steps Inserting Memory Cards The camera stores pictures on Secure Digital (SD) memory cards (available separately). 1 Insert a memory card. 1.1 Before inserting or removing memory cards, turn the camera off and open the card slot cover. 1.2 Slide the memory card in as shown at right until it clicks into place. The memory card access lamp will light for about a second. Close the memory card slot cover. Front 1.3 Turn the camera on. If the control panel shows the number of exposures remaining, the card is ready for use. If the message shown at right is displayed in the monitor, format the card as described in “Camera Error Messages and Displays” ( 133). The Access Lamp Do not remove the battery or disconnect the power source while the memory card access lamp is lit. Failure to observe this precaution could result in damage to the card. The Write Protect Switch SD cards are equipped with a write protect switch to prevent accidental loss of data. When this switch is in the “lock” position, the camera will display a message to warn that photos can not be recorded or deleted and the memory card can not be formatted. Introduction: First Steps 15 cards must be formatted the first time they are used in 2 Memory the D80. To format the memory card, turn the camera on and press the ( and ) buttons until control panel and viewfinder displays flash as shown at right. Pressing both buttons together a second time will format the memory card. During formatting, the letters will appear in the frame-count display. Do not turn the camera off or remove the battery until formatting is complete, the monitor has turned off, and the control panel shows the number of exposures remaining. Formatting Memory Cards Format cards in the camera. Performance may drop if they are formatted in a computer. Formatting memory cards permanently deletes all photographs and other data they may contain. Be sure all data you wish to keep have been copied to another storage device before formatting the card. Removing Memory Cards 1. Confirm that the access lamp is off. 2. Turn the camera off and open the memory card slot cover. 3. Press the card in to eject (). The card can then be removed by hand (). Camera Off Display If the camera is turned off with a battery and memory card inserted, the number of exposures remaining will be displayed in the control panel. If no and a icon memory card is inserted, the control panel will show will be displayed in the viewfinder. 16 Introduction: First Steps Adjusting Viewfinder Focus Photographs are framed in the viewfinder. Before shooting, make sure that the display in the viewfinder is in clear focus. Viewfinder Focus Viewfinder focus (diopter) can be adjusted in the range –2 – +1 m-1. Corrective lenses (available separately; 122) allow diopters of –5 – +3 m -1. 1 Remove the lens cap and turn the camera on. the diopter adjustment control until the focus brack2 Rotate ets are in sharp focus. When operating the diopter adjustment control with your eye to the viewfinder, be careful not to put your fingers or fingernails in your eye. Focus brackets Introduction: First Steps 17 Tutorial Photography and Playback The Tutorial outlines the basics of taking and viewing photographs in (auto) and Digital Vari-Program modes. This section assumes that default camera settings are used; for information on restoring default settings, see page 134. Use a CPU Lens (auto) and Digital Vari-Program modes are only available with CPU lenses. If these modes are selected when a non-CPU lens is attached, the shutter release will be disabled. Auto Meter Off At default settings, the viewfinder display and the aperture and shutter-speed indicators in the control panel will turn off if no operations are performed for about six seconds (auto meter off ), reducing the drain on the battery. Press the shutter-release button halfway to reactivate the display. 6s Exposure meters on Exposure meters off Exposure meters on The length of time before the exposure meters turn off automatically can be adjusted using Custom Setting 28 (Auto meter off; 99). 18 Tutorial “Point-and-Shoot” Photography ( Mode) This section describes how to take photographs in (auto) mode, an automatic “pointand-shoot” mode in which the majority of settings are controlled by the camera in response to shooting conditions. 1 Turn the camera on. 1.1 Remove the lens cap and turn the camera on. The control panel and viewfinder displays will light. The monitor remains off during shooting. 1.2 Check the battery level in the viewfinder or control panel. Control panel Viewfinder Description — Battery fully charged. — Battery partially discharged. Low battery. Ready fully-charged spare battery. (blinks) (blinks) Shutter release disabled. Change battery. Battery level not displayed when camera is powered by optional AC adapter. 1.3 The exposure count displays in the control panel and viewfinder show the number of photographs that can be stored on the memory card. Check the number of exposures remaining. If there is not enough memory to store additional photographs at current settings, the display will flash as shown at right. No further pictures can be taken until the memory card has been replaced ( 15) or photographs have been deleted ( 26, 65, 74). Tutorial: “Point-and-Shoot” Photography ( Mode) 19 2 Select mode and choose autofocus. 2.1 Rotate the mode dial to . 2.2 Rotate the focus-mode selector to AF (autofocus). 3 Check settings in the control panel. The default settings for Option Flash sync mode Image quality Image size Shooting mode Autofocus mode AF-area mode 20 Tutorial: “Point-and-Shoot” Photography ( Mode) mode are listed below. Default Auto JPEG Normal Large Single frame Auto select Auto-area AF 40 34 35 36 29 30 4 Frame a photograph in the viewfinder. The monitor remains off during shooting. 4.1 Hold the camera as shown. Holding the Camera Hold the handgrip in your right hand and cradle the camera body or lens with your left. Keep your elbows propped lightly against your torso for support and place one foot half a pace ahead of the other to keep you upper body stable. 4.2 Frame a photo in the viewfinder with the main subject positioned in any of the eleven focus areas. Focus area Using a Zoom Lens Zoom in Use the zoom ring to zoom in on the subject so that it fills a larger area of the frame, or zoom out to increase the area visible in the final photograph (select longer focal lengths on the lens focal length scale index to zoom in, shorter focal lengths to zoom out). Zoom out Tutorial: “Point-and-Shoot” Photography ( Mode) 21 5 Focus. 5.1 Press the shutter-release button halfway to focus. The camera will select the focus area automatically. If the subject is dark, the flash may pop up and the AF-assist illuminator may light. 5.2 When the focus operation is complete, the selected focus areas will be briefly highlighted, a beep will sound, and the in-focus indicator (●) will appear in the viewfinder (the beep may not sound if the subject is moving). While the shutter-release button is pressed halfway, focus will lock and the number of exposures that can be stored in the memory buffer will be displayed in the viewfinder. Shutter speed Selected focus area Buffer capacity In-focus indicator Shutter speed Aperture Viewfinder In-focus indicator ● ● (blinks) Aperture Control panel Description Subject in focus. Camera unable to focus on subject in focus area using autofocus. The Shutter-Release Button The camera has a two-stage shutter-release button. The camera focuses when the shutter-release button is pressed halfway. To take the photograph, press the shutter-release button the rest of the way down. Focus 22 Tutorial: “Point-and-Shoot” Photography ( Mode) Take photograph 6 Take the photograph. Smoothly press the shutter-release button the rest of the way down to release the shutter and record the photograph. The access lamp next to the memory card slot cover will light. Do not eject the memory card or remove or disconnect the power source until the lamp has gone out and recording is complete. 7 Turn the camera off when shooting is complete. Camera Off Display If the camera is turned off with a battery and memory card inserted, the number of exposures remaining will be displayed in the control panel. The Built-in Flash If additional lighting is required for correct exposure in mode, the built-in flash will pop up automatically when the shutter-release button is pressed halfway. Flash range varies with aperture and ISO sensitivity ( 141); remove lens hoods when using the flash. If the flash is raised, photographs can only be taken when the flash-ready indicator ( ) is displayed. If the flash-ready indicator is not displayed, remove your finger briefly from the shutter-release button and try again. To save battery power when the flash is not in use, return it to its closed position by pressing it gently downward till the latch clicks into place. For more information on using the flash, see page 40. Tutorial: “Point-and-Shoot” Photography ( Mode) 23 Creative Photography (Digital Vari-Programs) In addition to , the D80 offers a choice of six Digital Vari-Program modes. Selecting a program automatically optimizes settings to suit the selected scene, making creative photography as easy as rotating the mode dial. Mode Portrait Landscape Close up Sports Night landscape Night portrait Description For portraits. For natural and man-made landscapes. For close up shots of flowers, insects, and other small objects. For moving subjects. For low-light or night scenes. For portraits taken under low light. To take photographs in Digital Vari-Program modes: 1 Rotate the mode dial to select a Digital Vari-Program mode. 2 Frame a photograph, focus, and shoot. Focus Area At default settings, the camera selects the focus area as follows: • , , , and modes: The camera selects the focus area automatically. • mode: The camera focuses on the subject in the center focus area. Other focus areas can be selected with the multi selector ( 30). • mode: The camera focuses continuously while the shutter-release button is pressed halfway, tracking the subject in the center focus area. If the subject leaves the center focus area, the camera will continue to focus based on information from the other focus areas. The starting focus area can be selected with the multi selector ( 30). The Built-in Flash If additional lighting is required for correct exposure in , , or automatically when the shutter-release button is pressed halfway. 24 Tutorial: Creative Photography (Digital Vari-Programs) mode, the built-in flash will pop Portrait Use for portraits with soft, natural-looking skin tones. If the subject is far from the background or a telephoto lens is used, background details will be softened to lend the composition a sense of depth. Landscape Use for vivid landscape shots. The built-in flash and AF-assist illuminator turn off automatically. Close Up Use for close-up shots of flowers, insects, and other small objects. The camera automatically focuses on the subject in the center focus area. Use of a tripod is recommended to prevent blur. Sports High shutter speeds freeze motion for dynamic sports shots in which the main subject stands out clearly. The built-in flash and AF-assist illuminator turn off automatically . Night Landscape Slow shutter speeds are used to produce stunning night landscapes. The built-in flash and AF-assist illuminator turn off automatically; use of a tripod is recommended to prevent blur. Night Portrait Use for a natural balance between the main subject and the background in portraits taken under low light. Tutorial: Creative Photography (Digital Vari-Programs) 25 Basic Playback Photographs are automatically displayed for about four seconds after shooting. If no photograph is displayed in the monitor, the most recent picture can be viewed by pressing the button. Additional pictures can be displayed by rotating the main command dial or pressing the multi selector left or right. Press the multi selector up or down to view highlights or additional shooting information about the current photograph ( 62–63). To end playback and return to shooting mode, press the shutterrelease button halfway. Deleting Unwanted Photographs To delete the photograph currently displayed in the monitor, press the button. A confirmation dialog will be displayed. Press the button again to delete the image and return to playback. To exit without deleting the picture, press the button. 26 Tutorial: Basic Playback Reference This section builds on the Tutorial to cover more advanced shooting and playback options. More on Photography (All Modes): 28 Shoot a moving subject or focus manually Adjust image quality and size Take photographs in one at a time, in bursts, or using the self-timer or a remote control Use the built-in flash Raise ISO sensitivity when lighting is poor Restore default settings P, S, A, and M Modes: Focus: 28 Image Quality and Size: 33 Choosing a Shooting Mode: 36 Using the Built-in Flash: 40 ISO Sensitivity: 43 Two-Button Reset: 44 Mode P (Programmed Auto): 47 Mode S (Shutter-Priority Auto): 48 Mode A (Aperture-Priority Auto): 49 Mode M (Manual): 50 Exposure: 52 White Balance: 58 45 Let the camera choose shutter speed and aperture Freeze or blur motion Choose whether to blur background objects Choose shutter speed and aperture manually Choose a metering method, lock exposure, adjust exposure and flash level Make colors look natural Take photos under unusual lighting See the Menu Guide for information on other operations that can only be performed in P, S, A, and M modes, including customizing sharpening, contrast, color saturation, and hue (“Optimize Image”; 79) and creating multiple exposures (“Multiple Exposure”; 84). More on Playback: 61 View photographs on the camera See the Menu Guide for other playback options ( Connecting to a TV, Computer, or Printer: View photographs on TV Copy photographs to a computer Print photographs Viewing Photographs on the Camera: 61 Viewing Photographs on TV: 66 Connecting to a Computer: 67 Printing Photographs: 69 74). 66 Reference 27 More on Photography (All Modes) Focus Focus can be adjusted automatically (see “ Autofocus,” below) or manually ( 32). The user can also select the focus area for automatic or manual focus ( 30) or use focus lock to focus to recompose photographs after focusing ( 31). Autofocus Controls used: Focus mode selector When the focus mode selector is set to AF, the camera focuses automatically when the shutter-release button is pressed halfway. In single-area AF, a beep will sound when the camera focuses. No beep will sound when AF-A is selected in (sports) mode or when continuous-servo autofocus is used (note that continuous-servo autofocus may be selected automatically when shooting moving subjects in AF-A autofocus mode). If the lens does not support autofocus or the camera is unable to focus using autofocus, use manual focus ( 32). A-M Selection/Autofocus with Manual Priority If the lens is equipped with A-M selection or an M/A-M switch, select A (autofocus) or M/A (autofocus with manual priority). The AF-Assist Illuminator If the subject is poorly lit, the AF-assist illuminator will light automatically to assist the autofocus operation when the shutter-release button is pressed halfway. The AF-assist illuminator will not light in , , or modes or if Off has been selected for Custom Setting 4 (AF assist; 87). The illuminator has a range of about 0.5–3.0 m (1 ft. 8 in.–9 ft. 10 in.); when using the illuminator, use a lens with a focal length of 24–200 mm and remove the lens hood. 1 — Beep ( 86) This option can be used to turn the beep speaker on or off. 28 Reference: More on Photography (All Modes) / Focus Autofocus Mode Controls used: button The following autofocus modes are available when the focus mode selector is set to AF: Autofocus mode Description Camera automatically selects single-servo autofocus when subject is staAuto select AF-A tionary, continuous-servo autofocus when subject is moving. Shutter can (default setting) only be released if camera is able to focus. For stationary subjects. Focus locks when shutter-release button is pressed AF-S Single-servo AF halfway. Shutter can only be released when in-focus indicator is displayed. For moving subjects. Camera focuses continuously while shutter-release Continuous-servo AF-C button is pressed halfway. Photographs can be taken even when in-focus AF indicator is not displayed. To choose the autofocus mode, press the setting is displayed. button until the desired AF-A AF-C AF-S Getting Good Results with Autofocus Autofocus does not perform well under the conditions listed below. The shutter release may be disabled if the camera is unable to focus under these conditions, or the in-focus indicator (●) may be displayed and the camera may sound a beep, allowing the shutter to be released even when the subject is not in focus. In these cases, use manual focus ( 32) or use focus lock ( 31) to focus on another subject at the same distance and then recompose the photograph. There is little or no contrast The focus area contains obbetween the subject and the jects at different distances background from the camera Example: Subject is the same color as the background. Example: Subject is inside a cage. The subject is dominated by regular geometric patterns The focus area contains areas of sharply contrasting brightness Example: A row of windows in a skyscraper. Example: Subject is half in the shade. The subject appears smaller than the focus area The subject contains many fine details Example: Focus area contains both foreground Example: A field of flowers or other subjects that subject and distant buildings. are small or lack variation in brightness. Reference: More on Photography (All Modes) / Focus 29 Focus Area Selection Controls used: Multi selector (monitor off ) The D80 offers a choice of eleven focus areas that together cover a wide area of the frame. At the default settings, the camera chooses the focus area automatically or focuses on subject in the center focus area. The focus area can also be selected manually to compose photographs with the main subject positioned almost anywhere in the frame. settings, the focus area is selected automatically in 1 At ,default , , , and modes. To enable manual focus selection in these modes, select Single Area or Dynamic Area for Custom Setting 2 (AF-Area Mode; 87). Slide the focus selector lock to the “●” position. This allows the 2 multi selector to be used to select the focus area. the multi selector to select the focus area in the viewfinder 3 orUsecontrol panel while the exposure meters are active ( 18). The focus selector lock can be returned to the “L” (locked) position following selection to prevent the selected focus area from changing when the multi selector is pressed. Custom Settings Custom Setting 2 (AF-Area Mode; 87) controls how the camera selects the focus area. Custom Setting 3 (Center AF Area; 87) controls the size and number of focus areas available. Custom Setting 18 (AE-L/AF-L; 94) determines allows the AE-L/AF-L button to be used to select the focus area. Custom Setting 20 (Focus Area; 94) controls whether focus area selection “wraps around.” Custom Setting 21 (AF Area Illumination; 95) controls whether the active focus area is highlighted in the viewfinder. 30 Reference: More on Photography (All Modes) / Focus Focus Lock Controls used: AE-L/AF-L button (AF-A/AF-C)/Shutter-release button (AF-S) Focus lock can be used to change the composition after focusing, making it possible to focus on a subject that will not be in a focus area in the final composition. It can also be used when the autofocus system is unable to focus ( 29). the subject in the selected focus area and press the 1 Position shutter-release button halfway to initiate focus. 2 Check that the in-focus indicator (●) appears in the viewfinder. AF-A and AF-C autofocus modes ( 29) Press the AE-L/AF-L button to lock both focus and exposure. Focus will remain locked while the AE-L/AF-L button is pressed, even if you later remove your finger from the shutter-release button. AF-S autofocus modes ( 29) Focus will lock automatically when the in-focus indicator appears, and remain locked until you remove your finger from the shutter-release button. Focus can also be locked by pressing the AE-L/AF-L button (see below). An AE-L icon will be displayed in the viewfinder. 3 Recompose the photograph and shoot. Focus will remain locked between shots as long as the shutter-release button is kept pressed halfway, allowing several photographs in succession to be taken at the same focus setting. Focus will also remain locked between shots while the AE-L/AF-L button is pressed. Do not change the distance between the camera and the subject while focus lock is in effect. If the subject moves, focus again at the new distance. Continuous Shooting Mode ( 36) Use the AE-L/AF-L button to lock focus in continuous shooting mode. 18 — AE-L/AF-L ( 94) This option controls the behavior of the AE-L/AF-L button. Reference: More on Photography (All Modes) / Focus 31 Manual Focus Controls used: Focus mode selector/lens focusing ring Manual focus is available for lenses that do not support autofocus (non-AF Nikkor lenses) or when autofocus does not produce the desired results ( 29). To focus manually, set the focus-mode selector to M and adjust the lens focusing ring until the image displayed on the clear matte field in the viewfinder is in focus. Photographs can be taken at any time, even when the image is not in focus. When using a lens that offers A-M selection, select M when focusing manually. With lenses that support M/A (autofocus with manual priority), focus can be adjusted manually with the lens set to M or M/A. See the documentation provided with your lens for details. The Electronic Rangefinder If the lens has a maximum aperture of f/5.6 or faster, the viewfinder focus indicator can be used to confirm whether the portion of the subject in the selected focus area is in focus. After positioning the subject in the active focus area, press the shutter-release button halfway and rotate the lens focusing ring until the in-focus indicator (●) is displayed. Note that if the subject is one for which autofocus does not perform well ( 29), the in-focus indicator may be displayed when the subject is not in focus. Confirm that the image in the viewfinder is in focus before shooting. Focal Plane Position To determine the distance between your subject and the camera, measure from the focal plane mark on the camera body. The distance between the lens mounting flange ( 11) and the focal plane is 46.5 mm (1.83 in.). 32 Reference: More on Photography (All Modes) / Focus Image Quality and Size Together, image quality and size determine how much space each photograph occupies on the memory card. Larger, higher quality images can be printed at larger sizes but also require more memory, meaning that fewer such images can be stored on the memory card. le efi g r e La siz Image Quality and Size High < Image quality > Low JPEG Fine JPEG Normal JPEG Basic le ll fi a Sm size S M L Small < Image size > Large Changes to image quality and size are reflected in the number of exposures remaining as displayed in the control panel and viewfinder ( 19). Image Quality, Image Size, and File Size See the Appendix for information on the number of pictures that can be stored on a memory card ( 138). Reference: More on Photography (All Modes) / Image Quality and Size 33 Image Quality Controls used: button + main command dial (monitor off ) The camera supports the following image quality options (listed in descending order by image quality and file size): Option Description Compressed raw data from the image sensor are saved directly to memory card. NEF (RAW) Choose for images that will be processed on a computer. Images are compressed less than JPEG Normal, producing higher-quality images. JPEG Fine Compression ratio: roughly 1 : 4. JPEG Normal Best choice in most situations. Compression ratio: roughly 1 : 8. (default) JPEG Basic Smaller file size suited to e-mail or the Web. Compression ratio: roughly 1 : 16. NEF (RAW) + Two images are recorded: one NEF (RAW) image and one fine-quality JPEG image. JPEG Fine NEF (RAW) + Two images are recorded: one NEF (RAW) image and one normal-quality JPEG imJPEG Normal age. NEF (RAW) + Two images are recorded: one NEF (RAW) image and one basic-quality JPEG image. JPEG Basic Image quality can be set by pressing the QUAL button and rotating the main command dial until the desired setting is displayed in the control panel. Image quality can also be adjusted from the shooting menu ( 81). NEF (RAW)/NEF+JPEG Capture NX (available separately; 123) or the supplied ViewNX software are required to view NEF (RAW) images on a computer. ViewNX can be installed from the supplied Software Suite CD-ROM. When photographs taken at NEF (RAW) + JPEG Fine, NEF (RAW) + JPEG Normal, or NEF (RAW) + JPEG Basic are viewed on the camera, only the JPEG image will be displayed. When photographs taken at these settings are deleted, both NEF and JPEG images will be deleted. White balance bracketing ( 90) is not available when an NEF (RAW) + JPEG option is selected for image quality. Selecting an NEF (RAW) + JPEG option cancels white balance bracketing. 34 Reference: More on Photography (All Modes) / Image Quality and Size Image Size Controls used: button + sub-command dial (monitor off ) Image size is measured in pixels. The following options are available. Image size Large (3872 × 2592/10.0 M) (default) Medium (2896 × 1944/5.6 M) Small (1936 × 1296/2.5 M) Size (pixels) Approximate size when printed at 200 dpi* 3,872 × 2,592 49.2 × 32.9 cm (19.36 × 12.96 in.) 2,896 × 1,944 1,936 × 1,296 36.8 × 24.7 cm (14.48 × 9.72 in.) 24.6 × 16.5 cm (9.68 × 6.48 in.) * “dpi” stands for dots per inch, a measure of printer resolution. Images printed at higher resolutions will be smaller, images printed at lower resolutions larger. Image size can be set by pressing the QUAL button and rotating the sub-command dial until the desired setting is displayed in the control panel. Image quality can also be adjusted from the shooting menu ( 81). Note that the option selected for image size does not affect the size of NEF (RAW) images. When viewed on a computer, NEF images are 3,872 × 2,592 pixels in size. File Names Photographs are stored as image files with names of the form “DSC_nnnn.xxx,” where nnnn is a fourdigit number between 0001 and 9999 assigned automatically in ascending order by the camera, and xxx is one of the following three letter extensions: “NEF” for NEF images or “JPG” for JPEG images. The NEF and JPEG files recorded at a setting of “NEF+JPEG” have the same file names but different extensions. Small copies created with the small picture option in the retouch menu have file names beginning with “SSC_” and ending with the extension “.JPG” (e.g., “SSC_0001.JPG”), while images recorded with the other options in the retouch menu have file names beginning with “CSC” (e.g., “CSC_0001. JPG”). Images recorded at a Optimize Image > Custom > Color Mode setting of II (AdobeRGB) ( 80) have names that begin with an underscore (e.g., “_DSC0001.JPG”). Reference: More on Photography (All Modes) / Image Quality and Size 35 Choosing a Shooting Mode Controls used: button Shooting mode determines how the camera takes photographs: one at a time, in a continuous sequence, with a timed shutter-release delay, or with a remote control. Mode Single frame Continuous Self-timer Description Camera takes one photograph each time shutter-release button is pressed. Access lamp will light while photo is recorded; next shot can be taken immediately if enough space remains in memory buffer. Camera records photographs at up to three frames per second 1 while shutter-release button is pressed. Use for self-portraits or to reduce blurring caused by camera shake ( 37). Delayed remote Optional ML-L3 remote control required. Use for self-portraits ( 38). Quick-response Optional ML-L3 remote control required. Use to reduce blurring caused by remote camera shake ( 38). 1. Average frame rate with manual focus, manual or shutter-priority auto exposure, a shutter speed of / s or faster, and memory remaining in memory buffer. To choose a shooting mode, press the button until the desired setting is displayed. Buffer Size The number of images that can be stored in the memory buffer at current settings is shown in the exposure-count displays in the viewfinder and control panel while the shutter-release button is pressed. This number is updated as photographs are transferred to the memory card and more memory becomes available in the buffer. If 0 is displayed, the buffer is full and shooting will slow. Shooting can continue up to a maximum of 100 shots. See the Appendix for more information ( 138). While photographs are being recorded to the memory card, the access lamp next to the memory card slot will light. Do not remove the memory card or remove or disconnect the power source until the access lamp has gone out. If the camera is switched off while data remain in the buffer, the power will not turn off until all images in the buffer have been recorded. 36 Reference: More on Photography (All Modes) / Choosing a Shooting Mode Self-Timer Mode ( ) The self-timer can be used to reduce camera shake or for self-portraits. 1 Mount the camera on a tripod or place the camera on a stable, level surface. 2 Press the button until is displayed in the control panel. the photograph. Before taking a photograph with the flash in P, S, A, or M modes 3 (Frame 45), press the button to raise the flash and wait for the indicator to be displayed in the viewfinder ( started. 40). The timer will stop if the flash is raised after the timer has other than M, remove the viewfinder eyepiece cup 4 Inandmodes insert the supplied DK-5 eyepiece cap as shown. This prevents light entering via the viewfinder interfering with exposure. Press the shutter-release button halfway to focus, and then 5 press the button the rest of the way down to start the self-timer. The self-timer lamp will start to blink and a beep will begin to sound. Two seconds before the photograph is taken, the self-timer lamp will stop blinking and the beeping will become more rapid. At default settings, the shutter will be released ten seconds after the timer starts. The timer will not start if the camera is unable to focus or in other situations in which the shutter can not be released. The self-timer can be cancelled by selecting another shooting mode. Turning the camera off cancels self-timer mode and restores single frame or continuous shooting mode. Bulb In self-timer mode, a shutter speed of is equivalent to approximately / s. 1 — Beep ( 86) This option controls the beep that sounds during the self-timer count-down. 29 — Self-timer ( 99) Self-timer delay can be set to 2 s, 5 s, 10 s (the default setting), or 20 s. Reference: More on Photography (All Modes) / Choosing a Shooting Mode 37 Using a Remote Control ( ) Use the optional ML-L3 remote control for self-portraits ( remotely. 123) or to operate the camera Before Using the Remote Control Before using the remote control for the first time, remove the clear plastic battery insulator sheet. 1 Mount the camera on a tripod or place the camera on a stable, level surface. 2 Press the button to select one of the following modes: Mode Shutter released about 2 s after remote shutter-release button is pressed. Quick-response Shutter released when remote shutter-release remote button is pressed. Delayed remote The camera will enter stand-by mode. At default settings, single frame or continuous shooting mode will be restored if no operations are performed for about a minute. the photograph. If autofocus is in effect, the camera shutter-release button can 3 Frame be used to set focus, although only the shutter-release button on the remote control can be used to release the shutter. other than M, remove the viewfinder eyepiece cup 4 Inandmodes insert the supplied DK-5 eyepiece cap as shown. This prevents light entering via the viewfinder interfering with exposure. the transmitter on the ML-L3 at the infrared receiver on the 5 Aim camera and press the shutter-release button on the ML-L3. In delayed remote mode, the self-timer lamp will light for about two seconds before the shutter is released. In quick-response remote mode, the self-timer lamp will flash after the shutter has been released. If AF-A or AF-S is selected in autofocus mode ( 29), the camera will return to stand-by mode without releasing the shutter if unable to focus. The camera will release the shutter without focusing in manual focus mode, if AF-C is selected in autofocus mode, or if the camera has already been focused using the camera shutter-release button (see step 3). Remote control mode can be cancelled by selecting another shooting mode. Single-frame or continuous shooting mode will be restored if the camera is turned off or no operations are about one minute. 38 Reference: More on Photography (All Modes) / Choosing a Shooting Mode Using the Built-in Flash If the flash is required, the camera will only respond to the shutter-release button on the ML-L3 once the flash has charged. In , , , and modes, the flash will begin charging when delayed remote or quick-response remote mode is selected; once the flash is charged, it will pop up automatically if required when the shutter-release button on the ML-L3 is pressed. In P, S, A, and M modes, raising the flash during the two-second count-down in delayed remote mode will cancel the two-second timer. Wait for the flash to charge and then press the shutter-release button on the ML-L3 to restart the timer. In flash-sync modes that support red-eye reduction, the red-eye reduction lamp will light for about one second before the shutter is released. In delayed remote mode, the self-timer lamp will blink for two seconds and then light for one second before the shutter is released. 1 — Beep ( 86) This option controls the beeps that sound when the remote control is used. 30 — Remote on Duration ( 99) Choose length of time the camera will remain in stand-by before remote control mode is cancelled. Reference: More on Photography (All Modes) / Choosing a Shooting Mode 39 Using the Built-in Flash The camera supports a variety of flash modes for photographing poorly lit or backlit subjects. Using the Built-in Flash: , , , and Modes 1 Rotate the mode dial to select the desired mode. Press the button and rotate until the desired flash mode is displayed in the control 2 panel ( 41). Take pictures. The flash will pop up as required when the shutter-release button is 3 pressed halfway, and fire when a photograph is taken. Using the Built-in Flash: P, S, A, and M Modes 1 Rotate the mode dial to select the desired mode. 2 Press the button to raise the flash. Press the button and rotate until the desired flash mode is displayed in the control 3 panel ( 41). 4 Select a metering method and set exposure. 5 Take pictures. The flash will fire whenever a picture is taken. Lowering the Built-in Flash To save power when the flash is not in use, press it gently downward until the latch clicks into place. 40 Reference: More on Photography (All Modes) / Using the Built-in Flash Flash Mode The current flash mode is displayed in the control panel as shown below. is displayed when the flash is off. : Red-eye reduction Use for portraits. Red-eye reduction lamp lights before flash fires, reducing “red-eye.” : Off Flash does not fire even when lighting is poor or subject is back-lit. AUTO: Auto flash When lighting is poor or subject is back lit, flash pops up automatically when shutter-release button is pressed halfway and fires as required. If this icon is not displayed, flash will only pop up when button is pressed. SLOW: Slow sync Shutter speed slows automatically to capture background lighting at night or under low light. Use to include background lighting in portraits. REAR: Rear-curtain sync Flash fires just before shutter closes (see note on following page). If this icon is not displayed, flash will fire immediately after shutter opens. The flash modes available depend on the mode currently selected with the mode dial. , , Auto Auto+ red-eye reduction Auto+Slow sync Off Off P, A Fill flash Red-eye reduction Slow sync+ red-eye reduction Auto+ Slow sync+ red-eye reduction S, M Rearcurtain+ slow sync * Fill flash Red-eye reduction Rear-curtain sync Slow sync * SLOW is displayed after main command dial is released. Reference: More on Photography (All Modes) / Using the Built-in Flash 41 The Built-in Flash Use with CPU lenses with focal lengths of 18–300 mm or non-CPU lenses with focal lengths of 18–200 mm ( 118; note that auto flash level control is available with CPU lenses only). Remove lens hoods to prevent shadows. Lenses that block the subject’s view of the red-eye reduction lamp may interfere with red-eye reduction. The flash has a minimum range of 60 cm (2 ft.) and can not be used in the macro range of macro zoom lenses. If the flash fires in continuous shooting mode ( shutter-release button is pressed. 36), only one picture will be taken each time the The shutter release may be briefly disabled to protect the flash after it has been used for several consecutive shots. The flash can be used again after a short pause. See the Appendix for more about the built-in flash, including flash control, shutter sync speeds, and range. For information on optional flash units (Speedlights), see “Optional Flash Units (Speedlights)” ( 119). See “FV Lock” for information using FV lock ( 92). Rear-Curtain Sync Normally the flash fires as the shutter opens (“front-curtain sync”; see below at left). In rear-curtain sync, the flash fires just before the shutter closes, creating the effect of a stream of light behind moving subjects. Front-curtain sync Rear-curtain sync 22 — Built-in Flash ( 95) Choose how the built-in flash fires. 26 — Modeling Flash ( 98) Preview the effects of the flash. 42 Reference: More on Photography (All Modes) / Using the Built-in Flash ISO Sensitivity Controls used: button + main command dial (monitor off ) “ISO sensitivity” is the digital equivalent of film speed. The higher the ISO sensitivity, the less light needed to make an exposure, allowing higher shutter speeds or smaller apertures. ISO sensitivity can be set between values roughly equivalent to ISO 100 and ISO 1600 in steps equivalent to / EV. Values over 1600 are displayed as H 0.3 (ISO 2000 equivalent), H (auto) and Digital Vari-Pro0.7 (ISO 2500 equivalent), and H 1.0 (ISO 3200 equivalent). gram modes also offer an Auto setting that allows the camera to set ISO sensitivity automatically in response to lighting conditions. The default setting for (auto) and Digital Vari-Program modes is Auto, the default setting for P, S, A, and M modes 100. ISO sensitivity can be selected by pressing the ISO button and rotating the main command dial until the desired setting is displayed in the control panel. ISO sensitivity can also be adjusted from the shooting menu ( 83). High ISO NR ( 83) The higher the ISO sensitivity, the more likely pictures are to be subject to “noise” in the form of randomly-spaced, brightly-colored pixels. Photos taken at ISO sensitivities over ISO 1600 will likely contain appreciable amounts of noise. The High ISO NR option in the shooting menu can be used to reduce noise at ISO sensitivities of 400 or more. 7 — ISO Auto ( 88) This option can be used to enable automatic ISO sensitivity control in P, S, A, and M modes. Sensitivities of H 0.3, H 0.7, and H 1.0 are not available when ISO auto is on. Reference: More on Photography (All Modes) / ISO Sensitivity 43 Two-Button Reset Controls used: button + button The camera settings listed below can be restored to default values by holding the and buttons down together for more than two seconds (these buttons are marked by a green dot). The control panel turns off briefly while settings are reset. Custom Settings are not affected. Option Shooting mode ( 36–39) Image quality ( 34, 81) Image size ( 35, 81) ISO sensitivity ( 43, 83) , Digital Vari-Program P, S, A, M Default Single frame JPEG Normal Large Auto 100 White balance Auto ( 58–60, 82) * Autofocus mode ( 29) AF-A Focus area ( 30) † Center Metering ( 52) Matrix Off AE lock hold ( 53) * Fine-tuning reset to 0, Choose color temp. reset to 5000 K. † Focus area not displayed if Auto-area AF is selected for Custom Setting 2 (AF-area mode). Default Settings See the Appendix for a list of default settings ( 44 Option Flexible program ( 47) Exposure compensation ( 54) Bracketing ( 56–57) Flash exposure compensation ( 55) FV lock ( 92–93) Flash sync mode ( 40–42) , , Default Off ±0 ±0 ‡ ±0 Off Auto front-curtain sync Auto slow sync P, S, A, M Front-curtain sync Multiple exposure Off ( 84–85) ‡ Number of shots reset to zero. Bracketing increment reset to 1 EV (exposure/flash bracketing) or 1 (white balance bracketing). 134–137). Reference: More on Photography (All Modes) / Two-Button Reset P, S, A, and M Modes P, S, A, and M modes offer control over a variety of advanced settings, including exposure ( 52), white balance, and image optimization. Each of these modes offers a different degree of control over shutter speed and aperture: Mode Description Camera sets shutter speed and aperture for optimal exposure. RecomProgrammed auto P mended for snapshots and in other situations in which there is little ( 47) time to adjust camera settings. Shutter-priority auto User chooses shutter speed; camera selects aperture for best results. S ( 48) Use to freeze or blur motion. User chooses aperture; camera selects shutter speed for best results. Aperture-priority auto A Use to blur background or bring both foreground and background into ( 49) focus. User controls both shutter speed and aperture. Set shutter speed to M Manual ( 50) “bulb” or “--” for long time-exposures. Lens Aperture Ring When using a CPU lens equipped with an aperture ring ( 117), lock the aperture ring at the minimum aperture (highest f-number). Type G lenses are not equipped with an aperture ring. Non-CPU lenses can only be used in exposure mode M, when aperture can be adjusted manually using the lens aperture ring (in other modes, the shutter-release will be disabled). The camera exposure meter, ISO Auto, and variety of other features can not be used ( 117). Custom Settings Use Custom Setting 7 (ISO auto; 88) to enable auto ISO sensitivity control in P, S, A, and M modes. Custom Setting 10 (EV step; 89) determines the size of the increments used for exposure control. Custom Setting 15 (Command Dials; 91) determines the roles played by the main and sub-command dials in setting shutter speed and aperture. Reference: P, S, A, and M Modes 45 Exposure The exposure (brightness) of photographs is determined by the amount of light that falls on the image sensor (CCD) while the shutter is open. Two factors that determine exposure are shutter speed and aperture. Aperture refers to the size of the opening through which the light passes. The larger the aperture, the greater the amount of light that passes through the opening and the brighter the exposure. Smaller apertures mean less light and darker exposures. The camera displays show aperture in “f-numbers”: the larger the f-number, the smaller the aperture. Shutter speed determines how long the shutter is open. The slower the shutter speed, the longer the image sensor is exposed to light and the brighter the exposure. Faster shutter speeds mean that the image sensor is exposed to light for less time, producing darker exposures. The relationship between shutter speed and aperture can be likened to filling a cup from a tap. In this analogy, the amount of water needed to fill the cup is the amount of light needed for optimal exposure. If the cup overflows, the picture will be overexposed. If the cup doesn’t fill, the picture will be underexposed. The amount the tap is opened is the aperture, and the length of time the tap is opened the shutter speed. Open up the tap and the cup will fill in less time; tighten the tap and more time will be needed to fill the cup. Just as a cup can be filled in different times using different tap settings, different combinations of shutter speed and aperture can be used to produce the same exposure. The results, however, will be very different: fast shutter speeds and larger apertures freeze moving objects and soften background details, while slow shutter speeds and small apertures blur moving objects and bring out background details. Fast shutter speed (/ s) Slow shutter speed (1 s) Small aperture (f/36) Large aperture (f/3) (Remember, the larger the f-number, the smaller the aperture.) 46 Reference: P, S, A, and M Modes Mode P (Programmed Auto) In this mode, the camera automatically adjusts shutter speed and aperture for optimal exposure in most situations. This mode is recommended for snapshots and other situations in which you want to leave the camera in charge of shutter speed and aperture. To take photographs in programmed auto: 1 Rotate the mode dial to P. 2 Frame a photograph, focus, and shoot. Flexible Program In mode P, different combinations of shutter speed and aperture can be selected by rotating the main command dial (“flexible program”). Rotate the main command dial to the right for large apertures (small f-numbers) that blur background details or fast shutter speeds that “freeze” motion. Rotate the main command dial to the left for small apertures (large f-numbers) that increase depth of field or slow shutter speeds that blur motion. All combinations produce the same exposure. While flexible program is in effect, a indicator appears in the control panel. To restore default shutter speed and aperture settings, rotate the main command dial until the indicator is no longer displayed, choose another mode, or turn the camera off. Shutter speed: / s Aperture: f/8 Shutter speed: / s Aperture: f/2.8 (Large aperture) The exposure program for mode P is given in the Appendix ( 139). Reference: P, S, A, and M Modes / Mode P (Programmed Auto) 47 Mode S (Shutter-Priority Auto) In shutter-priority auto, you choose the shutter speed from values between 30 s and / s while the camera automatically selects the aperture that will produce the optimal exposure. Use slow shutter speeds to suggest motion by blurring moving subjects, high shutter speeds to “freeze” motion. To take photographs in shutter-priority auto: 1 Rotate the mode dial to S. 2 Rotate the main command dial to choose the desired shutter speed. 3 Frame a photograph, focus, and shoot. Shutter speed: / s Shutter speed: 1 s Flashing Shutter-Speed Display See “Camera Error Messages and Displays” ( 132) for information on what to do if flashing “ “ ” indicators appear in the shutter-speed displays. 48 Reference: P, S, A, and M Modes / Mode S (Shutter-Priority Auto) ” or Mode A (Aperture-Priority Auto) In aperture-priority auto, you choose the aperture from values between the minimum and maximum for the lens while the camera automatically selects the shutter speed that will produce the optimal exposure. Small apertures (high f-numbers) increase depth of field, bringing both the main subject and background into focus. Large apertures (low f-numbers) soften background details. To take photographs in aperture-priority auto: 1 Rotate the mode dial to A. 2 Rotate the sub-command dial to choose the desired aperture. 3 Frame a photograph, focus, and shoot. Depth of Field “Depth of field” is the distance to which objects behind and in front of the focus point appear to be in focus. Large apertures (low f-numbers) reduce depth of field, blurring objects behind and in front of the main subject. Small apertures (high f-numbers) increase depth of field, bringing out details in the background and foreground (note that depth of field is also influenced by other factors, such as focal length and focus distance). Short field depths are generally used in portraits to blur background details, long field depths in landscape photographs to bring the foreground and background into focus. To preview depth of field, press and hold the depth-of-field preview button. The lens will be stopped down to the current aperture value, allowing depth of field to be previewed in the viewfinder. Reference: P, S, A, and M Modes / Mode A (Aperture-Priority Auto) 49 Mode M (Manual) In manual exposure mode, you control both shutter speed and aperture. Shutter speed can be set to values between 30 s and / s, or the shutter can be held open for indefinitely for longer exposures ( ). Aperture can be set to values between the minimum and maximum values for the lens. To take photographs in manual exposure mode: 1 Rotate the mode dial to M. the main command dial to choose a shutter speed, and the sub-command dial to 2 Rotate set aperture. Check exposure in the electronic analog exposure displays (see below). 3 Frame a photograph, focus, and shoot. Shutter speed: / s, Aperture: f/4.5 Electronic Analog Exposure Display is selected, the electronic analog exIf a CPU lens is attached and a shutter speed other than posure displays in the control panel and viewfinder show whether the photograph would be under- or over-exposed at current settings. Depending on the option chosen for Custom Setting 10 (EV step; 89), the amount of under- or over-exposure is shown in increments of / EV or ⁄ EV. If the limits of the exposure metering system are exceeded, the displays will flash. EV Step set to “1/3 step” EV Step set to “1/2 step” Optimal exposure 50 Underexposed by / EV Underexposed by / EV Overexposed by more than 2 EV Overexposed by more than 3 EV Reference: P, S, A, and M Modes / Mode M (Manual) Long Time-Exposures Shutter speeds of “bulb” and “--” can be used for long time-exposure photographs of moving lights, the stars, night scenery, or fireworks. To prevent blurring caused by camera shake, use a tripod and an optional remote control ( 123) or remote cord ( 123). Shutter speed Description Shutter remains open while the shutter-release button is held down. Optional ML-L3 remote control required ( 123). Select mode M, choose a shutter speed of “bulb,” and then select delayed remote or quick-response remote mode ( 38). Shutter opens when the shutter-release button on the remote control is pressed and until the button is pressed a second time or remains open for thirty minutes. Shutter speed: 35 s, Aperture: f/25 To prevent loss of power before the exposure is complete, use a fully charged battery or an optional AC adapter. Note that noise may be present in long exposures; before shooting, choose On for the Long exp. NR option in the shooting menu ( 83). Reference: P, S, A, and M Modes / Mode M (Manual) 51 Exposure Metering Controls used: button + main command dial The metering method determines how the camera sets exposure. The following options are available: Method Description Recommended in most situations. Camera meters a wide area of the frame 3D Color Matrix II and sets exposure according to distribution of brightness, color, distance, and composition for natural results. Camera meters entire frame but assigns greatest weight to center area. Center-weighted Classic meter for portraits; recommended when using filters with an exposure factor (filter factor) over 1 × ( 122). Camera meters circle 3.5 mm (0.14 in.) in diameter (approximately 2.5 % of frame). Circle is centered on current focus area, making it possible to meter off-center subjects (if non-CPU lens is used or if Auto-area AF is selected Spot for Custom Setting 2 ( 87), camera will meter center focus area). Ensures that subject will be correctly exposed, even when background is much brighter or darker. To choose a metering method, press the the desired mode is displayed. button and rotate the main command dial until 12—Center Weight ( 90) This option controls the size of the area assigned the greatest weight in center-weighted metering. The default is 8mm (0.31in.). 3D Color Matrix II Metering In matrix metering, exposure is set using a 420-segment RGB sensor. Use a type G or D lens for results that include range information (3D color matrix metering II; 117). With other CPU lenses, 3D range information is not included (color matrix metering II). 52 Reference: P, S, A, and M Modes / Exposure Autoexposure Lock Controls used: AE-L/AF-L button Use auto exposure lock to recompose photographs after metering exposure: Select mode P, S, or A and choose center-weighted or spot metering (exposure lock has 1 no effect in mode M, while and Digital Vari-Program modes are not recommended as center-weighted and spot metering are not available in these modes). If using centerweighted metering, select the center focus area with the multi selector ( 30). the subject in the selected focus area and press the 2 Position shutter-release button halfway. With the shutter-release button pressed halfway and the subject positioned in the focus area, press the AE-L/AF-L button to lock exposure. While exposure lock is in effect, an AE-L indicator will appear in the viewfinder. Keeping the AE-L/AF-L button pressed, recompose the photo3 graph and shoot. Adjusting Shutter Speed and Aperture While exposure lock is in effect, the following settings can be adjusted without altering the metered value for exposure. Mode Programmed auto Shutter-priority auto Aperture-priority auto Setting Shutter speed and aperture (flexible program; Shutter speed Aperture 47) The new values can be confirmed in the viewfinder and control panel. Note that the metering method can not be changed while exposure lock is in effect (changes to metering take effect when the lock is released). 18 — AE-L/AF-L ( 94) This option controls the behavior of the AE-L/AF-L button. 19 — AE Lock ( 94) This option controls whether the shutter-release button locks exposure. Reference: P, S, A, and M Modes / Exposure 53 Exposure Compensation Controls used: button + main command dial Exposure compensation is used to alter exposure from the value suggested by the camera, making pictures brighter or darker. It is most effective when used with center-weighted or spot metering ( 52). Exposure compensation is available in modes P, S, and A (in mode M, only the exposure information shown in the electronic analog exposure display is affected; shutter speed and aperture do not change). Press the button and rotate the main command dial until the desired value is displayed in the control panel. Exposure compensation can be set to values between – 5 EV (underexposure) and + 5 EV (overexposure) in increments of / EV. In general, choose positive values to make the subject brighter, negative values to make it darker. At values other than ± 0, a icon will be displayed after you release the button. The current value for exposure compensation will be displayed in the viewfinder when the button is pressed. + 2.0 EV – 0.3 EV –1 EV No exposure compensation +1 EV Normal exposure can be restored by setting exposure compensation to ± 0. Exposure compensation is not reset when the camera is turned off. 10 — EV Step ( 89) Use this option to set the increments for exposure compensation to ½ EV. 11 — Exposure Comp. ( 89) If desired, exposure compensation can be set without pressing the 54 Reference: P, S, A, and M Modes / Exposure button. Flash Exposure Compensation Controls used: button + sub command dial Flash exposure compensation is used to alter flash output from the level suggested by the camera, changing the brightness of the main subject relative to the background. Flash output can be increased to make the main subject appear brighter, or reduced to prevent unwanted highlights or reflections. Press the ( ) button and rotate the sub-command dial until the desired value is displayed in the control panel. Flash compensation can be set to values between – 3 EV (darker) and + 1 EV (brighter) in increments of / EV. In general, choose positive values to make the subject brighter, negative values to make it darker. At values other than ± 0, a icon will be displayed after you release the ( ) button. The current value for flash compensation will be displayed in the viewfinder when the button is pressed. −0.3 EV +0.7 EV Normal flash output can be restored by setting flash compensation to ± 0.0. Flash exposure compensation is not reset when the camera is turned off. Using Flash Exposure Compensation with Optional Speedlights Flash exposure compensation is also available with an optional SB-800, SB-600, SB-400, or SB-R200 Speedlights. 10 — EV Step ( 89) Use this option to set the increments for flash compensation to ½ EV. Reference: P, S, A, and M Modes / Exposure 55 Bracketing Controls used: button + command dials Bracketing automatically varies selected settings slightly with each shot, “bracketing” the current value. The setting affected is chosen with Custom Setting 13 (Auto BKT set; 90); Below, it is assumed that AE & flash is selected to vary exposure and flash level. Other options can be used to vary exposure or flash level separately or to bracket white balance. the button and rotate the main command dial to choose the number of shots 1 Press in the bracketing sequence (two or three). No. of shots Progress indicator Press the button and rotate the sub-command dial to choose the bracketing incre2 ment from values between 0.3 EV and 2.0 EV. Bracketing increment Understanding the Bracketing Display Number of shots Progress indicator Description 3 shots: unmodified, negative, positive 2 shots: unmodified, positive 2 shots: unmodified, negative Bracketing Programs See the Appendix for a list of bracketing programs ( 140). 10 — EV Step ( 89) Use this option to set the increments for exposure and flash bracketing to ½ EV. 14 — Auto BKT Order ( 91) This option can be used to change the bracketing order. 56 Reference: P, S, A, and M Modes / Exposure a photograph, focus, and shoot. The camera will vary 3 Compose exposure and flash level with each shot. At default settings, the first shot will be taken at the current values for exposure and flash compensation and the following shots at modified values. If the bracketing sequence consists of three shots, the bracketing increment will be subtracted from the current values in the second shot and added in the third shot, “bracketing” the current values. The modified values can be higher or lower than the maximum and minimum values for exposure and flash compensation. The modified shutter speed and aperture are displayed in the control panel and viewfinder. While bracketing is in effect, a bracketing progress indicator will be displayed in the control panel. The segment will disappear from the indicator when the unmodified shot is taken, the indicator when the shot with the negative increment is taken, and the indicator when the shot with the positive increment is taken. To cancel bracketing, press the button and rotate the main command dial until the number of shots in the bracketing sequence is zero and is no longer displayed in the control panel. The program last in effect will be restored the next time bracketing is activated. Exposure Bracketing The camera modifies exposure by varying shutter speed and aperture (programmed auto), aperture (shutter-priority auto), or shutter speed (aperture-priority auto, manual exposure mode). When On is selected for Custom Setting 7 (ISO Auto; 88), the camera will automatically vary ISO sensitivity for optimum exposure when the limits of the camera exposure system are exceeded. In exposure bracketing, shutter speed will only be changed after the camera has adjusted ISO sensitivity. Exposure and Flash Bracketing In continuous mode, shooting will pause after the number of shots specified in the bracketing program. Selecting or Digital Vari-Program modes will cancel bracketing; bracketing will resume when mode P, S, A, or M is selected. Exposure and flash bracketing are cancelled when WB bracketing is selected for Custom Setting 13 (Auto BKT set; 90). Resuming Exposure or Flash Bracketing If the memory card fills before all shots in the sequence have been taken, shooting can be resumed from the next shot in the sequence after the memory card has been replaced or shots have been deleted to make room on the memory card. If the camera is turned off before all shots in the sequence have been taken, bracketing will resume from the next shot in the sequence when the camera is turned on. Reference: P, S, A, and M Modes / Exposure 57 White Balance Controls used: WB button + main command dial (monitor off ) White balance ensures that colors are unaffected by the color of the light source. Auto white balance is recommended for most light sources; if necessary, other values can be selected according to the type of source. The following options are available: Option Description Camera sets white balance automatically. Recommended for most situAuto ations. Incandescent Use under incandescent lighting. Fluorescent Use under fluorescent lighting. Direct Sunlight Use with subjects lit by direct sunlight. Flash Use with built-in flash or optional Nikon flash units. Cloudy Use in daylight under overcast skies. Shade Use in daylight with subjects in the shade. Choose color temp. Choose color temperature from list of values ( 59). White balance Use gray or white object or existing photograph as reference for white preset balance ( 59). To select a value for white balance, press the WB button and rotate the main command dial until the desired setting is displayed in the control panel. White balance can also be adjusted from the shooting menu ( 82). Fine-Tuning White Balance Controls used: WB button + sub-command dial (monitor off ) At settings other than (Choose color temp.) and PRE (White balance preset), white balance can be “fine tuned” by ± 3 in increments of one. Choose lower values to make photographs appear slightly more yellow or red, higher values to lend images a bluish tinge. Press the WB button and rotate the sub-command dial until the desired setting is displayed in the control panel. During shooting, settings other than ±0 are displayed in the control panel as shown at right. 58 Reference: P, S, A, and M Modes / White Balance Choosing a Color Temperature Controls used: WB button + sub-command dial (monitor off ) At a setting of (Choose color temp.), color temperature can be selected by pressing the WB button and rotating the sub-command dial until the desired value is displayed in the control panel. Color temperature can also be selected in the shooting menu ( 82). Preset White Balance Preset white balance can be used when the desired results can not be achieved at other settings or to match white balance to the value used in an previous photograph. Two methods are available for setting preset white balance: Method Direct measurement Copy from existing photograph Description Neutral gray or white object is placed under lighting that will be used in final photograph and white balance is measured by camera ( 60). White balance is copied from photo on memory card ( 82). Choose color temp. Take a test shot to determine if the selected color temperature is appropriate to the light source. Note that the desired results may not achieved with the flash or with fluorescent lighting; choose (Flash) or (Fluorescent) instead. Color Temperature The perceived color of a light source varies with the viewer and other conditions. Color temperature is an objective measure of the color of a light source, defined with reference to the temperature to which an object would have to be heated to radiate light in the same wavelengths. While light sources with a color temperature in the neighborhood of 5,000–5,500 K appear white, light sources with a lower color temperature, such as incandescent light bulbs, appear slightly yellow or red. Light sources with a higher color temperature appear tinged with blue. The color temperatures for each of the white balance settings supported by the camera may be found in the Appendix ( 140). 13 — Auto BKT Set ( 90) This option to create a series of photographs “bracketing” the current white balance value. Reference: P, S, A, and M Modes / White Balance 59 Measuring a Value for Preset White Balance a neutral gray or white object under the lighting that will be used in the final pho1 Place tograph. A standard gray card can be used as a reference in studio settings. Do not use exposure compensation. the WB button and rotate the main command dial until 2 Press control panel. is displayed in the the WB button briefly and then press the button until displays start to flash as 3 Release shown at right. To exit without measuring a new value for white balance, press the WB button. the reference object so that it fills the viewfinder and 4 Frame press the shutter-release button all the way down. The camera will measure a value for white balance and use this value when preset white balance is selected. No photograph will be recorded. To exit without measuring a new value for white balance, press the WB button. the camera was able to measure a value for white balance, the 5 Ifdisplays will flash as shown at right for about six seconds before the camera returns to shooting mode (to return to shooting mode before the display stops flashing, press the shutter-release button halfway). White balance will automatically be set to the measured value. If the displays flash as shown at right, the camera was unable to measure white balance. Press the shutter-release button halfway to return to Step 4 and measure white balance again. 60 Reference: P, S, A, and M Modes / White Balance More on Playback Viewing Photographs on the Camera To view photographs in the monitor, press the button. Photographs taken in “tall” (portrait) orientation are displayed in tall orientation as shown at right. The following operations can be performed in full-frame playback: To Use Description Press multi selector to right or rotate main command dial right to view photographs in order recorded. Press multi selector left View additional or or rotate main command dial left to view photographs in rephotographs verse order. View photo inforPress multi selector up or down or rotate sub-command dial to or mation view information about current photograph ( 62). Zoom in on current photograph ( 64). Zoom in on photo Delete photo Delete current photograph ( 65). Protect photo Protect current photograph ( 65). View thumbnails View multiple photographs ( 63). Exit to shooting Shutter button To turn monitor off and return to shooting mode, press shuttermode or button. release button halfway or press the View menus ( 74). View menus Retouch photo Create retouched copy of current photograph ( 109). Auto Image Rotation ( 108)/Rotate Tall ( 75) These options control whether photographs taken in “tall” orientation are rotated for display in the monitor during playback. 6 — Image Review ( 88) Choose whether to display photographs as they are taken. 27 — Monitor Off ( 98) Choose how long the monitor remains on before turning off automatically to save power. Reference: More on Playback / Viewing Photographs on the Camera 61 Photo Information Photo information is superimposed on images displayed in full-frame playback. Press the multi selector up or down or rotate the sub-command dial to cycle through the following information: Basic Information ↔ Shooting Data Page 1 ↔ Shooting Data Page 2 ↔ Retouch History (retouched copies only) ↔ Highlights ↔ RGB Histogram ↔ Basic Information. Basic Information 1 Protect status .......................... 65 2 Retouch indicator ............. 109 3 Frame number/total number of images 4 Folder name ............................ 75 5 6 7 8 9 Image quality.......................... 34 Date of recording .......14, 103 Time of recording ......14, 103 File name ................................... 35 Image size ................................. 35 Protect status .......................... 65 Retouch indicator ............. 109 Camera name Metering .................................... 52 Shutter speed ................. 48, 50 Aperture ............................ 49, 50 Shooting Data, Page 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Mode ........................................... 45 Exposure compensation .. 54 Focal length................................1 Flash mode .............................. 40 Frame number/total number of images Shooting Data, Page 2 7 Tone compensation ........... 80 Protect status .......................... 65 8 Sharpening .............................. 80 Retouch indicator ............. 109 9 Color mode/hue ................... 80 Image optimization 1.......... 79 ISO sensitivity 2 ....................... 43 10 Saturation ................................. 80 11 Image comment 3 ............. 104 White balance/white balance fine-tuning ............ 58 12 Frame number/total number of images 6 Image size/ image quality.................. 34, 35 1. Filter name is displayed if photo was taken with filter option selected for Optimize image > Black-and-white > Custom. 2. Displayed in red if ISO sensitivity was modified from selected value by auto ISO. 3. Only first 13 letters are displayed. 1 2 3 4 5 Retouch History 1 1 Protect status ...........................................................................................................65 2 Retouch indicator ..............................................................................................109 3 Retouch history: Lists changes made to image using options in retouch menu ( 109), starting with most recent change. .109 4 Frame number/total number of images 1. Displayed if image was created using options in retouch menu. 62 Reference: More on Playback / Viewing Photographs on the Camera Highlights Highlights are areas of the image in which details may be lost (“washed out”) due to overexposure. Use the highlight display as a guide when adjusting exposure. 1 Protect status ...........................................................................................................65 2 Retouch indicator ..............................................................................................109 3 Image highlights (areas of image that are “washed out”) are indicated by flashing border 4 Frame number/total number of images RGB Histogram A histogram is a graph showing the distribution of tones in the image. The horizontal axis corresponds to pixel brightness, with dark pixels at the left and bright pixels at the right. The vertical axis shows the number of pixels of each brightness in the image. Note that camera histograms may differ from those displayed in imaging applications. 1 2 3 4 Protect status .......................... 65 Retouch indicator ............. 109 Histogram (all channels) Red channel histogram 5 Green channel histogram 6 Blue channel histogram 7 Frame number/total number of images Viewing Multiple Images: Thumbnail Playback To display images in “contact sheets” of four or nine images, press the button in full-frame playback. The following operations can be performed while thumbnails are displayed: To Display more images per page Display fewer images per page Highlight photographs View highlighted picture full frame Delete photo Protect photo Exit to shooting mode View menus Use Description Increase number of images displayed from one (full-frame playback) to four or from four to nine. Decrease number of images displayed from nine to four or from four to one (full-frame playback). Use multi selector to highlight photographs, or rotate main command dial to move cursor up or down, sub-command dial to move cursor left or right. View picture highlighted in thumbnail list full frame. Delete highlighted photograph ( 65). Protect highlighted photograph ( 65). Shutter button To turn monitor off and return to shooting mode, press shutteror button. release button halfway or press the View menus ( 74). Reference: More on Playback / Viewing Photographs on the Camera 63 Taking a Closer Look: Playback Zoom Press the button to zoom in on a photograph in full-frame playback. The following operations can be performed: To Description Press to zoom in to maximum of approximately 25 × (large images), 19 × (medium images) or 13 × (small images). Press Zoom in and out / to zoom out. While photo is zoomed in, press multi selector up, down, left, or right to view areas of image not visible in monitor. Keep multi selector pressed to scroll rapidly to other areas of frame. Navigation window is displayed when zoom View other areas of ratio is altered; area currently visible in monitor is indicated by image yellow border. Rotate main command dial to view same location in other imView other images ages at current zoom ratio. Cancel zoom Return to full-frame playback. Delete current photograph ( 65). Delete photo Protect current photograph ( 65). Protect photo Exit to shooting Shutter button To turn monitor off and return to shooting mode, press shuttermode or release button halfway or press the button. View menus ( 74). View menus 64 Use Reference: More on Playback / Viewing Photographs on the Camera Protecting Photographs from Deletion In full-frame, zoom, and thumbnail playback, the button can be used to protect photographs from accidental deletion. Protected files can not be deleted using the button or the Delete option in the playback menu, and have DOS “read-only” status when viewed on a Windows computer. Note that protected files will be deleted when the memory card is formatted ( 102). Press the button to protect the photograph currently displayed in full-frame or zoom playback or highlighted in the thumbnail list. The photograph will be marked with a icon. butTo remove protection from the photograph so that it can be deleted, press the ton when the photograph is displayed in full-frame or zoom playback or highlighted in the thumbnail list. To remove protection from all images in the folder or folders currently selected for Playback Folder, press the and buttons together for about two seconds. Deleting Individual Photographs Press the button to delete the photograph currently displayed in full-frame or zoom playback or highlighted in the thumbnail list. One of the following confirmation dialogs will be displayed; press the button again to delete the photograph. Press any other button to exit without deleting the photograph. Delete ( 74) This option can be used to delete multiple photographs. Reference: More on Playback / Viewing Photographs on the Camera 65 Connecting to a TV, Computer, or Printer Viewing Photographs on TV The supplied EG-D2 audio/video (A/V) cable can be used to connect the camera to a television or VCR for playback or recording. Background music included with Pictmotion slide shows ( 75) will be played back over the television speakers. 1 Choose the appropriate video mode ( 103). the camera off. Always turn the camera off before con2 Turn necting or disconnecting the A/V cable. 3 Connect the A/V cable as shown. Video connector Audio (white) Connect to video device Video (yellow) Connect to camera 4 Tune the television to the video channel. the camera on. During playback, images will be displayed 5 Turn on the television or recorded to video tape; the camera monitor will remain off. Use an AC Adapter Use of an EH-5/EH-5a AC adapter (available separately) is recommended for extended playback. When the EH-5/EH-5a is connected, the camera monitor-off delay will be fixed at ten minutes and the exposure meters will remain on indefinitely. 66 Reference: Connecting to a TV, Computer, or Printer / Viewing Photographs on TV Connecting to a Computer This section describes how to connect the camera to a computer using the supplied UC-E4 USB cable. Once the camera is connected, Nikon Transfer (supplied) or optional Nikon software such as Camera Control Pro 2 or Camera Control Pro can be used to copy photographs to the computer or control the camera remotely. Before Connecting the Camera Install Nikon Transfer from the supplied Software Suite installer CD (see the Quick Start Guide for more information). To ensure that data transfer is not interrupted, be sure the camera battery is fully charged. If in doubt, charge the battery before connecting the camera or use an EH-5/EH-5a AC adapter (available separately). Before connecting the camera, select the USB item in the camera setup menu and choose a USB option as described below. Computer operating system* Windows Vista (32-bit Home Basic/ Home Premium/Business/Enterprise/ Ultimate editions) Windows XP (Home Edition/Professional) Mac OS X (version 10.3.9 or 10.4.10) Windows 2000 Professional USB Choose MTP/PTP or Mass Storage Choose Mass Storage† * See the websites listed on page x for the latest information on supported operating systems. † Do NOT select MTP/PTP. If MTP/PTP is selected when the camera is connected, the Windows hardware wizard will be displayed. Click Cancel to exit the wizard, and then disconnect the camera and select Mass Storage. Connecting the USB Cable 1 Turn the computer on and wait for it to start up. 2 Turn the camera off. the supplied UC-E4 USB cable as shown. Do not use force or attempt to insert 3 Connect the connectors at an angle. Connect the camera directly to the computer; do not connect the cable via a USB hub or keyboard. USB connector Reference: Connecting to a TV, Computer, or Printer / Connecting to a Computer 67 Turn the camera on. The computer will detect the camera au4 tomatically and display Nikon Transfer. If Mass Storage is selected for USB, the control panel and viewfinder will display the indicators shown at right (when MTP/PTP is selected, the normal shooting indicators are displayed). Transfer photographs to the computer as described in the online help for Nikon Trans5 fer. To view the online help, start Nikon Transfer and select Nikon Transfer help from the Nikon Transfer Help menu. MTP/PTP is selected for USB, the camera can be turned off and the USB cable discon6 Ifnected once transfer is complete. If Mass Storage is selected, the camera must first be removed from the system as described below. Windows Vista/Windows XP Click the “Safely Remove Hardware” icon in the taskbar ( ) and select Safely remove USB Mass Storage Device. Windows 2000 Professional Click the “Unplug or Eject Hardware” icon in the taskbar ( ) and select Stop USB Mass Storage Device. Mac OS X Drag the camera volume (“NIKON D80”) into the Trash. Note that Nikon Transfer will automatically remove the camera from the system when transfer is complete. During Transfer Do not turn the camera off or disconnect the USB cable while transfer is in progress. Camera Control Pro 2 and Camera Control Pro Camera Control Pro 2 and Camera Control Pro (both available separately; 123) can be used to operate the camera from a computer. Before connecting the camera, set the camera USB option ( 104) to MTP/PTP. When Camera Control Pro is running, the camera will show in place of the number of exposures remaining. Camera Control Pro automatically checks for updates if an Internet connection is detected at startup. 68 Reference: Connecting to a TV, Computer, or Printer / Connecting to a Computer Printing Photographs Photographs can be printed by any of the following methods: • Connect the camera to a printer and print JPEG photographs directly from the camera (see below). • Insert the camera memory card in a printer equipped with a card slot (see the printer manual for details). If the printer supports DPOF ( 134), photographs can be selected for printing using Print Set ( 73). • Take the camera memory card to a developer or digital printer center. If the center supports DPOF, photographs can be selected for printing using Print Set. • Transfer pictures ( 67) and print them from a computer using ViewNX (supplied) or Capture NX (available separately; 123). Note that this is the only method available for printing RAW (NEF) pictures. Printing Via Direct USB Connection JPEG photographs can be printed directly from a camera connected to a PictBridge printer ( 134). When taking photographs for printing via direct USB connection in P, S, A, and M modes, choose Ia (sRGB) or IIIa (sRGB) for the Custom > Color mode option in the Optimize image menu ( 80). Take photographs Select photographs for printing using Print Set Select MTP/PTP in camera USB menu and connect camera to printer ( Print photographs one at a time ( 71) Print multiple photographs ( 72) 70) Create index prints ( 72) Disconnect USB cable Printing Via Direct USB Connection If an error occurs during printing, the camera will display the dialog shown at right. After checking the printer, press the multi selector up or down to highlight Continue and press OK to resume printing. Select Cancel to exit without printing the remaining pages. RAW (NEF) photographs can not be printed by direct USB connection. They are displayed in the Print Select menu but can not be selected for printing. Reference: Connecting to a TV, Computer, or Printer / Printing Photographs 69 Connecting the Printer Before printing, check that the camera battery is fully charged. If in doubt, charge the battery or use an EH-5/EH-5a AC adapter (available separately). 1 Set the camera USB option to MTP/PTP ( 104). 2 Turn the printer on. 3 Turn the camera off. the supplied UC-E4 USB cable as shown. Do not use force or attempt to insert 4 Connect the connectors at an angle. Connect the camera directly to the printer; do not connect the cable via a USB hub or keyboard. USB connector Turn the camera on. A welcome screen will be displayed, fol5 lowed by the PictBridge playback display. Proceed to “ Printing Pictures One at a Time” ( 72). 71) or “ Printing Multiple Pictures” ( ➜ Press the multi selector left or right to view additional photographs, or press the button to zoom in on the current photo ( 64). To view six photographs at a time, press the button. Use the multi selector to highlight photographs, or press to display the highlighted photograph full frame. 70 Reference: Connecting to a TV, Computer, or Printer / Printing Photographs Printing Pictures One at a Time To print the picture currently selected in the PictBridge playback display, press OK. The menu shown at right will be displayed. Press the multi selector up or down to highlight an option and press to the right to select. Option Description Print current picture. To cancel and return to PictBridge playback display before printStart ing is complete, press OK. PictBridge playback display is shown when printing is comPrinting plete. Menu shown at right will be displayed. Press multi selector up or down to choose page size from Printer Default Page Size (default page size for current printer), 3.5 x 5 in., 5 x 7 in., 100 x 150 mm, 4 x 6 in., 8 x 10 in., Letter, A3, or A4, then press OK to select and return to print menu. Menu shown at right will be displayed. Press multi selector up or down to choose number of copies (maximum 99), No. of Copies then press OK to select and return to print menu. Menu shown at right will be displayed. Press multi selector up or down to choose print style from Printer Default Border (default for current printer), Print with Border (print photo with white border), or No Border, then press OK to select and return to print menu. Menu shown at right will be displayed. Press multi selector up or down to choose Printer Default (default for current Time stamp printer), Print Time Stamp (print time and date of recording on photo), or No Time Stamp, then press OK to select and return to print menu. Menu shown at right will be displayed. To exit without cropping picture, highlight No cropping and press OK. To crop picture, highlight Crop and press multi selector right. Cropping If Crop is selected, dialog shown at right will be displayed. Use and buttons to choose size of crop and use multi selector to choose position of crop. Press OK to return to print menu. Page Size, Border, and Time Stamp Choose printer default to print at current printer settings. Only options supported by the current printer can be selected. Reference: Connecting to a TV, Computer, or Printer / Printing Photographs 71 Printing Multiple Pictures To print multiple pictures or create an index print listing all JPEG button in the photographs as small thumbnail images, press the PictBridge playback display. The menu shown at right will be displayed. Press the multi selector up or down to highlight an option and press to the right to select. Option Description Print Select Print selected pictures (see below). Print (DPOF) Print current DPOF print order ( 73). Create index print of all JPEG photos, to maximum of 256. Confirmation dialog shown at right will be displayed; press OK to display menu of print options. Choose page size, border, and time stamp options as described on precedIndex Print ing page (warning will be displayed if selected page size is too small). To start printing, highlight Start Printing and press OK. PictBridge menu will be displayed when printing is complete. Printing Selected Photographs Choosing Print Select displays the menu shown in Step 1. 1 Scroll through pictures. To display current button. picture full screen, press 72 2 Select current picture and set number of prints to 1. Selected pictures marked by icon. 3 Specify number of prints (up to 99). To deselect picture, press multi selector down when number of prints is 1. Repeat Steps 1 – 3 to select additional pictures. 4 Display print options. Choose page size, border, and time stamp options as described on page 71. To start printing, highlight Start Printing and press OK. PictBridge menu will be displayed when printing is complete. Reference: Connecting to a TV, Computer, or Printer / Printing Photographs Creating a DPOF Print Order: Print Set The Print Set option in the playback menu is used to create digital “print orders” for PictBridge-compatible printers and devices that support DPOF. Selecting Print Set from the playback menu displays the menu shown in Step 1. 1 2 Highlight Select / Set. Display selection dialog. 3 Select pictures and specify number of prints as described in Steps 2 – 3 on previous page. Note that RAW (NEF) photos can not be selected for printing. 4 Display options. Highlight option and press multi selector right: • Data imprint: Print shutter speed and aperture on all pictures in print order. • Imprint date: Print date of recording on all pictures in print order. To complete print order and exit, highlight Done and press OK. To print the current print order when the camera is connected to a PictBridge printer, select Print (DPOF) in the PictBridge menu and follow the steps in “ Printing Selected Photographs” to modify and print the current order ( 72). DPOF date and data imprint options are not supported when printing via direct USB connection; to print the date of recording on photographs in the current print order, use the PictBridge Time Stamp option ( 71). Print Set The Print Set option can not be used if there is not enough space on the memory card to store the print order. Print orders may not print correctly if images are deleted using a computer after the print order is created. Reference: Connecting to a TV, Computer, or Printer / Printing Photographs 73 Menu Guide Playback Options: The Playback Menu The playback menu contains the following options (options displayed may differ if My menu is selected for the CSM/Setup menu option in the setup menu; 101). See “Using Camera Menus” ( 9) for more information on using the menus. Option Description Delete Delete all or selected photos. Playback folder Choose folder for playback. Rotate tall Slide show Hide image Print set 74 75 Rotate “tall” (portrait-orientation) photos during playback. Play photos back in automatic slide shows, either with background music and 75 panning, zoom, and transition effects (Pictmotion) or without (standard). Hide selected photos. 78 Select photos for printing. 78 Delete The delete menu contains the following options: Option Selected All Description Delete selected photographs (see below). Delete all photographs. Selecting Multiple Pictures To select multiple pictures for deletion, slide shows, or the Hide image option: 1 2 Highlight picture. To view highlighted picture full frame, press button. 3 Repeat steps 1–2 to select additional pictures. To deselect picture, highlight and press multi selector down. Select highlighted picture. Selection shown by icon. 4 Complete operation. 74 75 Menu Guide / Playback Options: The Playback Menu Playback Folder Choose a folder for playback: Option Description Only photos in the folder currently selected for Folders in the shooting menu are displayed during playback. This option is selected Current automatically when a photo is taken. If a memory card is inserted (default) and this option selected before photos have been taken, a message stating that the folder contains no images will be displayed during playback. Select All to begin playback. All Play back photos in all folders on the memory card. Rotate Tall Select On to rotate “tall” (portrait-orientation) photos for display in the monitor. Photographs taken with Off selected for Auto image rotation ( 108) will be displayed in “wide” (landscape) orientation. Slide Show Play pictures back one after the other in an automated “slide show.” A Pictmotion option is available with transitions, panning and zoom effects and background music (background music will only be audible if the camera is connected to a television set; 66). The recommended steps involved in creating a slide show are shown below. photos 1 Select Highlight Select pictures and press the multi selector right. Highlight one of the following options and press OK to select the highlighted option and return to the slide show menu. •All pictures: Slide show will include all the photos in the current playback folder ( 75). •Select pictures: Select up to fifty photos for the slide show ( 74). Only photos in the current playback folder ( 75) are available for selection; hidden photos and images that can not be displayed by the camera can not be selected. Menu Guide / Playback Options: The Playback Menu 75 a style 2 Choose Highlight Change settings and press the multi selector right, then highlight Style and press the multi selector right. Highlight one of the following options and press OK to select the highlighted option and return to the slide show menu. •Standard: Pictures are played back at a selected interval, without background music, transitions, or other effects. •Pictmotion: Select a pattern that includes background music with matching transitions and panning and zoom effects. Note that background music will only be audible if the camera is connected to a television ( 66). a frame interval or playback pattern 3 Choose Highlight Change settings and press the multi selector right, then choose a frame interval or playback pattern as described below. “Standard” selected in Step 2 To change the interval between slides from the default setting of two seconds, highlight Frame interval and press the multi selector right. Highlight one of the following options and press OK to select the highlighted option and return to the slide show menu. “Pictmotion” selected in Step 2 To change the background track from the default setting of Pachelbel’s Canon, highlight Background music and press the multi selector right. Highlight one of the following options and press OK to select the highlighted option and return to the slide show menu. Panning and zoom effects and transitions are matched to the selected background track. 76 Menu Guide / Playback Options: The Playback Menu the show 4 Start To start the slide show, highlight Start and press OK. The following operations can be performed during a slide show: To Use Go forward or back one frame / View photo info / Pause slide show Exit to playback menu Exit to playback mode Exit to shooting mode Description Press multi selector or rotate main command dial left to return to the previous frame, right to skip to the next frame. This option is not available if Pictmotion is selected in Step 2. Change the photo info displayed. This option is not available if Pictmotion is selected in Step 2. Pause the slide show. End the slide show and return to the playback menu. Shutter release End the slide show and return to full-frame ( 61) or thumbnail playback ( 63). Press the shutter-release button halfway to turn the monitor off and return to shooting mode. Photos can be taken immediately. The dialog shown at right is displayed when the show ends or when the button is pressed to pause playback. Select Restart to restart the show or Exit to return to the playback menu. Menu Guide / Playback Options: The Playback Menu 77 Hide Image Hide or reveal selected photographs. Hidden images are visible only in the Hide Image menu, and can only be deleted by formatting the memory card. Option Select/set Deselect all? Description Hide or reveal selected photographs ( Reveal all photographs. 74). File Attributes for Hidden Images Hidden images have “hidden” and “read-only” status when viewed on a Windows computer. In the case of “NEF + JPEG” images, this marking applies to both NEF (RAW) and JPEG images. Print Set Choose Select / set to select photographs for printing on a PictBridge printer or DPOF-compatible device ( 73). Choose Deselect all? to remove all photos from the current print order. Protected and Hidden Images Revealing an image that is both hidden and protected will simultaneously remove protection from the image. 78 Menu Guide / Playback Options: The Playback Menu Shooting Options: The Shooting Menu The shooting menu contains the following options (options displayed may differ if My menu is selected for the CSM/Setup option in the setup menu; 101). See “Using Camera Menus” ( 9) for more information on using the menus. Option Description Optimize image * Optimize images according to scene. Choose image quality. Image quality † Image size † Choose image size. White balance *, † Adjust colors according to the light source. Raise sensitivity when lighting is poor. ISO sensitivity † Long exp. NR Reduce noise at slow shutter speeds. High ISO NR Reduce noise at high ISO sensitivities. Multiple exposure *, † Record multiple exposures in a single frame. * Available in P, S, A, and M modes only. † Reset to defaults when a two-button reset is performed ( 44). 79–81 81 81 82 83 83 83 84–85 Optimize Image (P, S, A, and M Modes) Optimize contrast, sharpening, and other settings according to how photographs will be used or the type of scene. Option Description N Normal (default) Recommended for most situations. SO Softer VI Vivid VI More vivid PO Portrait Custom BW Black-and-white Softens outlines, producing natural results suitable for portraits or retouching on a computer. Enhances saturation, contrast, and sharpness to produce vivid images with vibrant reds, greens, and blues. Maximizes saturation, contrast, and sharpness to produce crisp images with sharp outlines. Lowers contrast while lending natural texture and rounded feel to skin of portrait subjects. Customize image optimization settings ( 80). Take photos in black-and-white ( 81). At Settings Other than “Custom” At settings other than Custom: • Photographs are optimized for current shooting conditions. Results will vary with exposure and the position of the subject in the frame. • The sRGB color space is used. To use the Adobe RGB color space, select Custom and choose II (Adobe RGB) for Color Mode. • Use a type G or D lens for best results. Menu Guide / Shooting Options: The Shooting Menu 79 Customizing Image Enhancement Options: Custom Select Custom to make separate adjustments to the following options. After adjusting settings, highlight Done and press . • Image sharpening: Choose how much outlines are sharpened during shooting. Choose high settings for sharp outlines, low settings for softer outlines. Default setting: Auto. • Tone compensation: Control contrast. Lower settings prevent loss of detail in highlights under harsh lighting or in direct sunlight. Higher settings preserve detail in misty landscapes and other low-contrast subjects. Choose Custom to select a user-defined tone curve created using Camera Control Pro 2 or Camera Control Pro (both available separately; 123). See the software instruction manual for details. Default setting: Auto. • Color mode: Control color reproduction. Photos taken in modes Ia and IIIa are adapted to the sRGB color space and are suited for printing or use “as is,” with no further modification. Choose Ia for portrait shots and IIIa for nature or landscape shots. Mode II is adapted to the Adobe RGB color space, which supports a wider gamut of colors than sRGB. Mode II is the preferred choice for photos that will be extensively processed or retouched. Default setting: Ia (sRBG). • Saturation: Control the vividness of colors. Choose Moderate for less saturated colors, Enhanced for more vivid colors. Default setting: Auto. • Hue adjustment: Hue can be adjusted between –9 ˚ to +9 ˚ in increments of 3 ˚ (the degrees refer to the “color wheel” often used to express hue). Positive values make reds more orange, greens more blue, and blues more purple. Negative values make reds more purple, blues more green, and greens more yellow. Default setting: ±0. “Auto” Results for auto image sharpening, tone compensation, and saturation vary with exposure and the position of the subject in the frame. Use a type G or D lens for best results. Color Mode Modes Ia and IIIa are recommended for photos that will be printed without modification or viewed in applications that do not support color management. If the application supports color management, choose the Adobe RGB color space when opening photos taken in mode II. ViewNX (supplied) and Capture NX (available separately; 123) display colors correctly even if the correct color space is not selected. 80 Menu Guide / Shooting Options: The Shooting Menu Taking Pictures in Black-and-White: Black-and-White Selecting Black-and-white for Optimize image displays the menu shown at right. Choose Normal to take standard black-and-white pictures, or Custom to adjust sharpening and tone compensation before shooting as described in on page 80. Custom also supports the following color filter effects: Filter effect Off Yellow Orange Red Green Description No color filter effect. Enhances contrast. Can be used to tone down the brightness of the sky in landscape photographs. Orange produces more contrast than yellow, red more contrast than orange. Softens skin tones. Can be used for portraits. Black-and-white indicators appear in the control panel and viewfinder when Black-andwhite is selected for Optimize image ( 5–7). Image Quality (All Modes) Seven options are available for image quality. See “Reference: Image Quality and Size” ( 33). Image Size (All Modes) Image size can be selected from Large, Medium, and Small. See “Reference: Image Quality and Size” ( 33). Menu Guide / Shooting Options: The Shooting Menu 81 White Balance (P, S, A, and M Modes) Nine options are available for white balance. See “Reference: White Balance” ( 58). Copying White Balance from a Photograph A white balance value copied from an existing photograph can be used for preset white balance. Select White balance > White balance preset in the shooting menu. The menu shown in Step 1 will be displayed. 1 2 Highlight Use photo. * * To use last measured value ( Display current source photo. 60), highlight Measure and press multi selector right. 3 4 Highlight Select image. † Display folder list. † To use the previous source photo, highlight This image and press multi selector right. 5 6 Highlight folder. Display images in selected folder. 7 8 Highlight photograph. ‡ Set preset white balance to value for highlighted photograph and return to shooting menu. ‡ Images displayed may include those created with other cameras, but only photographs created with D80 can be used as source for preset white balance. Note that if a new value is measured for white balance, white balance will be set to the measured value even if Use photo is currently selected in the preset white balance menu. 82 Menu Guide / Shooting Options: The Shooting Menu ISO Sensitivity (All Modes) Adjust ISO sensitivity. See “Reference: ISO Sensitivity” ( 43). Long Exp. NR (All Modes) Photographs taken at shutter speeds slower than 8 s can be processed to reduce “noise” in the form of randomly-spaced, brightly-colored pixels. Choose from the following options: Option Off (default) On Description Noise reduction off. Photographs taken at shutter speeds slower than 8 s are processed to reduce noise, slowing burst shooting and reducing the number of images that can be stored in the memory buffer. During processing, the displays shown at right appear in the control panel and viewfinder. No further photos can be taken until processing is complete. Noise reduction will not be performed if the camera is turned off during processing. Note that if photos are played back during processing, the image displayed in the monitor may not show the effects of noise reduction. High ISO NR (All Modes) Photographs taken at high sensitivities can be processed to reduce “noise”. Choose from the following options: Option Normal (default) Low High Off Description Noise reduction takes effect at sensitivities over ISO 400. Choose Low for less noise reduction, High for more noise reduction. Noise reduction turns off unless sensitivity exceeds ISO 800. Minimal noise reduction is performed at sensitivities over ISO 800. Menu Guide / Shooting Options: The Shooting Menu 83 Multiple Exposure (P, S, A, and M Modes) Follow the steps below to record a series of two or three exposures in a single photograph. Note that at default settings, shooting will end automatically if no operations are performed for 30 s. For an interval between exposures of more than 30 s, choose 30 min for Custom Setting 28 (Auto meter-off; 99) or use an optional EH-5/EH-5a AC adapter. Multiple exposure in the shooting menu displays the 1 Selecting menu shown at right. Highlight Number of shots and press the multi selector right. Press the multi selector up or down to choose the number of ex2 posures that will be combined to form a single photograph. Press OK to return to the multiple exposure menu. 3 Highlight Auto gain and press the multi selector to the right. one of the following options and press OK. 4 Highlight Option Description On (default) Off Gain adjusted to correct exposure according to the number of exposures recorded (gain for each exposure is set to / for two exposures, / for three exposures). Gain not adjusted to correct exposure. Recommended if background is dark. Exchanging Memory Cards Do not remove or replace the memory card while recording a multiple exposure. Photo Info The date of recording, metering, exposure, mode, focal length, camera orientation, and other information listed in the playback photo information display is for the first shot in the multiple exposure. 84 Menu Guide / Shooting Options: The Shooting Menu 5 Highlight Done and press OK. A icon will be displayed in the control panel. To exit without recording a multiple exposure, select Multiple exposure from the shooting menu, highlight Reset, and press OK. a photograph, focus, and shoot. The 6 Frame blink. icon will start to Cancelling a Multiple Exposure To end shooting before the multiple exposure is complete, select Multiple exposure from the shooting menu, highlight Cancel, and press OK. Shooting will also end if: • The exposure meters turn off during shooting ( 18) • The user performs a two-button reset • The camera is turned off • The battery is exhausted • The multiple exposure is deleted • A mode other than P, S, A, or M is selected If shooting ends before the specified number of exposures have been taken, a multiple exposure will be created from the exposures that have been recorded to that point. If Auto gain is on, gain will be adjusted to reflect the number of exposures actually recorded. Take the remaining exposures. The icon will disappear from the 7 control panel when shooting is complete. Repeat steps 1 – 7 to take additional multiple exposures. Bracketing and Other Settings Bracketing is cancelled when multiple exposure is selected and can not be restored until shooting has ended. While multiple exposure mode is in effect, memory cards can not be formatted and no shooting menu options can be changed, with the exceptions of Multiple exposure and White balance. Menu Guide / Shooting Options: The Shooting Menu 85 Custom Settings Custom Settings are used to customize camera settings to suit individual preferences. The following options are available when Simple (the default option) is selected for CSM/Setup menu in the setup menu ( 101): R 1 2 3 4 5 Option Reset Beep AF-area mode Center AF area AF-assist No memory card? 86 86 87 87 87 88 6 7 8 9 10 Option Image review ISO auto Grid display Viewfinder warning EV step 88 88 89 89 89 To display the following options, select Full for CSM/Setup menu: 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Option Exposure comp. Center-weighted Auto BKT set Auto BKT order Command dials FUNC button Illumination AE-L/AF-L AE lock Focus area AF area illumination 89 90 90–91 91 91 92–93 93 94 94 94 95 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Option Built-in flash Flash warning Flash shutter speed Auto FP Modeling flash Monitor-off Auto meter-off Self-timer Remote on duration Exp. delay mode MB-D80 batteries R: Reset Select Reset to restore all Custom Settings to their default values, including settings not affected by a two-button reset ( 44). See the Appendix ( 134) for a complete list of default settings. 1: Beep (All Modes) At the default setting of On, a beep will sound when the camera focuses in single-servo AF (AF-S or when shooting stationary subjects in AF-A autofocus mode), while the release timer is counting down in selftimer and delayed remote modes ( 37, 38), or when a photograph is taken in quick-response remote mode ( 38). The beep will not sound when Off is selected. The current setting is shown in the control panel: is displayed when the beep is on, when it is off ( 5). 86 Menu Guide / Custom Settings 95–97 98 98 98 98 98 99 99 99 99 100 2: AF-Area Mode (All Modes) This option determines how the focus area is selected in autofocus mode ( 28). Choose from: Option Description User selects focus area using multi selector; camera focuses on subject in selected Single area focus area only. Use with stationary subjects. Default setting for P, S, A, M, and modes. User selects focus area manually, but if subject leaves selected focus area even briefDynamic area ly, camera will focus based on information from other focus areas. Use with erratically moving subjects. Default setting for mode. Auto-area AF Camera selects focus area automatically. Default for , , , , and modes. The current setting is shown by an icon in the control panel ( 5). 3: Center AF Area (All Modes) This option determines the size of the center focus area. Option Description Viewfinder display Focus on a specific subject in a small area Normal zone without other nearby objects interfering with (default) focus. Focus on moving subjects and other objects that are difficult to track. Not available when Wide zone Auto-area AF is selected for Custom Setting 2 (AF-area mode). See “Focus” for more information on focus settings ( 4: AF-Assist (All Modes Except , 28). , and ) If On (the default setting) is selected and the subject is poorly lit, the AF-assist illuminator will light to assist the focus operation in single-servo AF (AF-S or single-servo AF selected in AF-A autofocus mode) when Single area or Auto-area AF is selected for Custom Setting 2 (AFarea mode) or when Custom Setting 2 is set to Dynamic area and the center focus area is selected. Choose Off to disable the AF-assist illuminator. Note that when the illuminator is off, the camera may not be able to focus on poorly-lit subjects using autofocus. Menu Guide / Custom Settings 87 5: No Memory Card? (All Modes) If Release locked (the default setting) is selected, the shutter-release is disabled when no memory card is inserted. Choose Enable release to enable the shutter-release button when no memory card is inserted. Photographs will be displayed in the monitor but will not be saved. 6: Image Review (All Modes) If On (the default setting) is selected, photographs will automatically be displayed in the monitor for about four seconds after shooting. If Off is selected, photographs can be displayed in the monitor by pressing the button. 7: ISO Auto (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) If Off (the default setting) is selected, ISO sensitivity will remain fixed at the value selected with the ISO button ( 43) or using the ISO sensitivity option in the shooting menu ( 83). If On is selected, ISO sensitivity will automatically be adjusted if optimal exposure can not be achieved at the selected value (flash level is adjusted appropriately). The maximum value for auto ISO sensitivity can be selected using the Max. sensitivity option. In modes P and A, sensitivity will only be adjusted if underexposure would result at the shutter speed selected for Min. shutter speed. When On is selected, the control panel and viewfinder show ISO-AUTO. When sensitivity is altered from the value selected by the user, these indicators blink and the altered value is shown in the viewfinder (the indicators do not blink if a flash is used. ISO Auto Auto ISO control is not available when a value over ISO 1600 is selected for ISO sensitivity. ISO sensitivity can not be set to values over 1600 when On is selected for ISO auto. Foreground subjects may be underexposed in photos taken with the flash at slow shutter speeds, in daylight, or against a bright background. Choose a flash mode other than slow sync or select mode A or M and choose a larger aperture. Noise is more likely at higher sensitivities. Use the High ISO NR option in the shooting menu to reduce noise ( 83). 88 Menu Guide / Custom Settings 8: Grid Display (All Modes) Select On to display grid lines in the viewfinder to assist in framing photographs ( 6). The default option is Off. 9: Viewfinder Warning (All Modes) Select On (the default option) to display the following warnings in the viewfinder ( 6): Warning B/W Description Displayed when Black-and-white is selected for Optimize image in the shooting menu ( 81). Displayed when the battery is low. Displayed when no memory card is inserted. No warnings are displayed when Off is selected. 10: EV Step (All Modes) Choose whether adjustments to shutter speed, aperture, and bracketing are made in increments equivalent to / EV (1/3 step, the default option) or / EV (1/2 step). 11: Exposure Comp. (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) If Off (the default option) is selected, exposure compensation is set by pressing the button and rotating the main command dial ( 54). Select On to set exposure compensation using only a command dial. The dial used depends on the option selected for Custom Setting 15 (Command dials; 91): Mode P S A M Custom Setting 15 (Command dials): Off Sub-command dial Sub-command dial Main command dial Exposure compensation set by pressing Custom Setting 15 (Command dials): On Sub-command dial Main command dial Sub-command dial button and rotating main command dial If On is selected, the 0 at the center of the exposure display will blink even when exposure compensation is set to ±0. This option is not available in mode M. Menu Guide / Custom Settings 89 12: Center-Weighted (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) This option controls the size of the area in the center of the viewfinder assigned the greatest weight in center-weighted metering. The default option is Φ 8 mm. 13: Auto BKT Set (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) The following options are available: Option AE & flash (default) AE only Description Camera varies flash level and exposure with each shot. Camera varies exposure with each shot. Camera varies flash level with each shot (i-TTL and, with the opFlash only tional SB-800 Speedlight, auto aperture modes only; 119, 120). Each time the shutter is released, the camera creates multiple images “bracketing” the current white balance setting. Only one shot is required to complete the bracketing sequence. White balance bracketing is recommended when shooting under mixed lightWB bracketing ing or experimenting with different white balance settings. Not available at a whitebalance of (Choose color temp.) or at image qualities of NEF (RAW), NEF+JPEG Fine, NEF+JPEG Normal, or NEF+JPEG Basic. For information on recording photographs at settings of AE & flash, AE only, and Flash only, see “Bracketing” ( 56). To take photographs using white balance bracketing: 1 Highlight WB bracketing and press the multi selector right. the button and rotate the main command dial to choose the number of images 2 Press in the bracketing sequence. the button and rotate the sub-command dial to choose the white balance ad3 Press justment. Each increment is roughly equivalent to 10 mired. 90 Menu Guide / Custom Settings Compose a photograph, focus, and shoot. Each shot will be pro4 cessed to create the number of copies specified in the bracketing program, and each copy will have a different white balance. Modifications to white balance are added to the white balance adjustment made with white balance fine-tuning. If the number of images in the bracketing program exceeds the number of exposures remaining, ( ) will be displayed and the number of exposures remaining will blink. Shooting can begin if a new memory card is inserted. button and rotate the main comTo cancel bracketing, press the mand dial until the number of shots in the bracketing sequence is zero and is no longer displayed in the control panel. The program last in effect will be restored the next time bracketing is activated. Bracketing can also be cancelled by performing a two-button reset ( 44), although in this case the bracketing program will not be restored the next time bracketing is activated. 14: Auto BKT Order (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) Choose the order in which bracketing is performed. Option Description Default order Unmodified > negative > positive ( (default) Under > MTR > over Negative > unmodified > positive ( 56). 56, 140). 15: Command Dials (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) Choose the command dials used to set shutter speed and aperture. Option Default (default) Reversed Description The main command dial controls shutter speed, the subcommand dial aperture. The main command dial controls aperture, the sub-command dial shutter speed. White Balance Bracketing Selecting NEF (RAW), NEF+JPEG Fine, NEF+JPEG Normal, or NEF+JPEG Basic for image quality ( 34) or (Choose color temp.) for white balance ( 58) cancels white balance bracketing. Bracketing Programs See the Appendix for a list of white balance bracketing programs. Menu Guide / Custom Settings 91 16: FUNC Button (All Modes) Choose the function performed by the FUNC. button. Option ISO display (default) Framing grid AF-area mode Center AF area FV lock Flash off Matrix metering Center-weighted Spot metering Description The modified value for ISO sensitivity is displayed while the FUNC. button is pressed. Press the FUNC. button and rotate the main command dial to turn the grid display in the viewfinder on and off ( 89). Press the FUNC. button and rotate the main command dial to select AF area mode ( 87). Press the FUNC. button and rotate the main command dial to choose between normal and wide center AF areas ( 87). If the built-in flash or an optional SB-800, SB-600, SB-400, or SB-R200 flash unit is used, flash value locks when the FUNC. button is pressed ( 93). Press again to cancel FV lock. Built-in flash and optional Speedlights turn off while the FUNC. button is pressed. Matrix metering is activated while the FUNC. button is pressed (P, S, A, and M modes only). Center-weighted metering is activated while the FUNC. button is pressed (P, S, A, and M modes only). Spot metering is activated while the FUNC. button is pressed (P, S, A, and M modes only). FV Lock This feature is used to lock flash output, preventing the flash level from changing between shots or while recomposing photographs. Flash output is adjusted automatically for any changes in ISO sensitivity or aperture. FV Lock Both the FUNC. and the AE-L/AF-L button can be used for FV lock. FV lock using the FUNC. button is described below; to use the AE-L/AF-L button, choose FV lock for Custom Setting 18 (AE-L/AF-L; 94). 1 Select FV lock for Custom Setting 16 (FUNC button). Raise the flash. In , , , and modes, the flash will pop up au2 tomatically as required when the shutter-release button is pressed halfway. In P, S, A, and M modes, press the flash. 92 Menu Guide / Custom Settings button to raise the the subject in the center of the frame and press the shut3 Position ter-release button halfway to focus. Check that the flash-ready indicator ( ) is displayed in the viewfinder. Press the FUNC. button. The flash will emit a monitor preflash to 4 determine the appropriate flash level. Flash output will be locked at this level and a flash-value lock icon will appear in the viewfinder. 5 Recompose the photograph. the shutter-release button the rest of the way down to shoot. 6 Press If desired, additional pictures can be taken without releasing FV lock. the FUNC. button to release FV lock and confirm that the 7 Press icon is no longer displayed in viewfinder. 17: Illumination (All Modes) If Off (the default option) is selected, the control panel backlight (LCD illuminator) will turn on only when the power switch is rotated to . If On is selected, the backlight will remain on while the exposure meters are active (note that this will increase the drain on the battery). Using FV Lock with Optional Speedlights FV lock is also available with SB-800, SB-600, SB-400 and SB-R200 Speedlights (available separately). Set the Speedlight to TTL mode (the SB-800 can also be used in AA mode; see the Speedlight manual for details). While FV lock is in effect, flash output will automatically be adjusted for changes in Speedlight zoom head position. When Commander mode is selected for Custom Setting 22 (Built-in flash; 96), FV lock can be used with remote SB-800, SB-600, or SB-R200 flash units if (a) any of the built-in flash, flash group A, or flash group B is in TTL mode, or (b) a flash group is composed entirely of SB-800 Speedlights in TTL or AA mode. Using FV Lock with the Built-in Flash When the built-in flash is used alone, FV lock is only available if TTL (the default setting) is selected for Custom Setting 22 (Built-in flash; 95). Menu Guide / Custom Settings 93 18: AE-L/AF-L (All Modes) Choose the function performed by the AE-L/AF-L button. Option AE/AF lock (default) AE lock only AF lock Description Both focus and exposure lock while the AE-L/AF-L button is pressed. Exposure locks while the AE-L/AF-L button is pressed. Focus is unaffected. Focus locks while the AE-L/AF-L button is pressed. Exposure is unaffected. Exposure locks when the AE-L/AF-L button is pressed and remains locked until the AE lock hold button is pressed again or the exposure meters turn off. The AE-L/AF-L button initiates autofocus. The shutter-release button can not be used AF-ON to focus. If the built-in flash or an optional SB-800, SB-600, or SB-R200 flash unit is used, flash FV lock value locks when the AE-L/AF-L button is pressed ( 92). Press again to cancel FV lock. Focus area Press the AE-L/AF-L button and rotate the sub-command dial to select the focus area selection ( 30). Press the AE-L/AF-L button to lock focus and exposure, press and rotate the sub-comAE-L/AF-L/AF area mand dial to select the focus area. Press the AE-L/AF-L button to lock exposure, press and rotate the sub-command dial AE-L/AF area to select the focus area. Press the AE-L/AF-L button to lock focus, press and rotate the sub-command dial to AF-L/AF area select the focus area. Press the AE-L/AF-L button to initiate autofocus, press and rotate the sub-command AF-ON/AF area dial to select the focus area. 19: AE Lock (All Modes) If Off (the default option) is selected, pressing the shutter-release button halfway does not lock exposure. If On is selected, exposure will lock when the shutter-release button is pressed halfway. 20: Focus Area (All Modes) At the default setting of No wrap, the focus-area display is bounded by the outer focus areas so that, for example, pressing the multi selector up when the focus area is selected has no effect. Select Wrap to allow focus-area selection to “wrap around” from top to bottom, bottom to top, right to left, and left to right. 94 Menu Guide / Custom Settings 21: AF Area Illumination (All Modes) At the default setting of Auto, the active focus area is highlighted in the viewfinder as need to establish contrast with the background. If Off is selected, the focus area is not highlighted. If On is selected, the focus area will always be highlighted, although it may be difficult to see against the background. 22: Built-in Flash (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) Choose a flash control mode for the built-in flash. TTL (default): Flash output is adjusted automatically in response to shooting conditions. Manual: The flash fires at the level selected in the menu shown at right. At full power, the built-in flash has a Guide Number of 13/42 (m/ft., ISO 100, 20 ˚C/68 ˚F). No monitor preflash is emitted. Repeating flash: The flash fires repeatedly while the shutter is open, producing a strobe-light effect. Selecting this option displays the menu shown at right. Press the multi selector left or right to highlight the following options, up or down to change. Option Output Times Freq. Description Choose flash output (expressed as a fraction of full power). Choose the number of times the flash fires at the selected output. The options available depend on the option selected for Output. The number of times the flash fires per second. “Times” The number of times the flash can fire in succession is determined by flash output. Note that depending on shutter speed and the option selected for Freq., the actual number of flashes emitted may be less than selected. Output 1/4 1/8 1/16 1/32 1/64 1/128 Options available for “Times” 2 2–5 2–10 2–10, 15 2–10, 15, 20, 25 2–10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35 Menu Guide / Custom Settings 95 Commander mode: Use the built-in flash as a master flash controlling one or more remote optional SB-800, SB-600, or SB-R200 flash units in up to two groups (A and B) using advanced wireless lighting. Selecting this option displays the menu shown at right. Press the multi selector up or down to highlight the following options, up or down to change. • Built-in flash: Choose a flash control mode for the built in flash. i-TTL mode. Choose a flash compensation (Comp.) value between +3.0 and –3.0 EV in steps of will be displayed in the control panel and viewfinder. / EV. At settings other than ±0, Choose from output levels between 1/1 (full power) and 1/128 (/ of full power). flashes M in the control panel and viewfinder. does not appear in control panel Built-in flash does not fire, but AF-assist illuminator lights. -flash mode display. Note that the built-in flash must be raised to emit monitor preflashes. TTL • Group A/Group B: Choose a flash control mode for all flash units in Group A or B. TTL i-TTL mode. Choose a Comp. value between +3.0 and –3.0 EV in steps of / EV. Auto aperture. Choose a flash compensation (Comp.) value between +3.0 and –3.0 EV in steps AA of / EV. SB-600 and SB-R200 flash units will not fire when this option is selected. M Choose from output levels between 1/1 (full power) and 1/128 (/ of full power). - - The flash units in the selected group do not fire. • Channel: Choose from channels 1–4. All flash units in both groups must be set to the same channel. To take photographs in commander mode: the flash control mode and output level for the built-in 1 Choose flash. Note that output level can not be adjusted when - - is selected for flash control mode. the flash control mode and output level for the flash units 2 Choose in group A. the flash control mode and output level for the flash units 3 Choose in group B. 4 Select the channel. 96 Menu Guide / Custom Settings 5 Press OK. Compose the shot and arrange the flash units as shown below. Note that the maxi6 mum distance at which the remote flash units can be placed may vary with shooting conditions. 60°–30° 5 m/16 ft. or less 10 m/33 ft. or less 30° or less Wireless remote sensors on flash units should face camera. Camera (built-in flash) 30° or less 5 m/16 ft. or less 60°–30° all the remote flash units on and set them to the channel selected in Step 4. See 7 Turn the Speedlight instruction manuals for details. the button to raise the built-in flash. Note that even if 8 -Press - is selected for Built-in flash > Mode, the built-in flash must be raised so that monitor preflashes will be emitted. and shoot after confirming that the flash-ready lights on the camera and all re9 Focus mote flash units are lit. Commander Mode Position the sensor windows on the remote flash units to pick up the monitor preflashes from the builtin flash (particular care is required when not using a tripod). Be sure that direct light or strong reflections from the remote flash units do not enter the camera lens (in TTL mode) or the photocells on the remote flash units (AA mode), as this may interfere with exposure. To prevent timing flashes emitted by the built-in flash from appearing in photographs taken at short range, choose low ISO sensitivities and small apertures (large f-numbers) or use an optional SG-3IR infrared panel for the built-in flash. An SG-3IR is required for best results with rear-curtain sync, which produces brighter timing flashes. After positioning the remote flash units, take a test shot and view the results in the camera monitor. Although there is no limit on the number of remote flash units that may be used, the practical maximum is three. With more than this number, the light emitted by the remote flash units will interfere with performance. Flash compensation ( 55) is added to the flash output for all flash units, including the built-in flash. Menu Guide / Custom Settings 97 23: Flash Warning (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) If On (the default setting) is selected and lighting is poor, the flashready light ( ) will flicker in the viewfinder when the shutter-release button is pressed halfway to warn that the built-in flash is required. No warning will be displayed if Off is selected. 24: Flash Shutter Speed (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) Choose the slowest shutter speed at which the flash will be used in modes P and A (the default setting is 1/60 s). Regardless of the setting chosen, the flash will fire at shutter speeds as slow as 30 s when set to slow sync ( 41). 25: Auto FP (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) Select On to activate Auto FP High-Speed Sync when using the optional SB-800, SB-600, or SB-R200 flash units at shutter speeds faster than / s (because the actual shutter speed may be slightly slower than displayed in P and A modes, Auto FP may not always be activated at a shutter speed of / s). Choose to enable fill flash when taking portraits under bright light or when taking photographs at Large apertures. Auto FP High-Speed Sync is not available when using the built-in flash. The default setting is Off. 26: Modeling Flash (P, S, A, and M Modes Only) If On is selected, the built-in flash and optional SB-800, SB-600, and SBR200 flash units will emit a modeling flash when the camera depth-offield preview button is pressed ( 49). The default setting is Off. 27: Monitor-Off (All Modes) Choose how long the monitor remains on when no operations are performed (the default setting is 20 s). Choose a shorter monitor-off delay for longer battery life. Regardless of the setting chosen, the monitor remains on for four seconds during image review ( 88) and for ten minutes when the camera is powered by an optional EH-5/EH-5a AC adapter. 98 Menu Guide / Custom Settings 28: Auto Meter-Off (All Modes) Choose how long the camera continues to meter exposure when no operations are performed (the default setting is 6 s). Choose a shorter meter-off delay for longer battery life. Regardless of the setting chosen, the exposure meters remain on for ten minutes when the camera is powered by an optional EH-5/EH-5a AC adapter. 29: Self-Timer (All Modes) Choose the length of the shutter-release delay in self-timer mode ( 37). The default setting is 10 s. 30: Remote On Duration (All Modes) Choose how long the camera will wait for a signal from the remote before cancelling delayed or quick-response remote modes ( 38). Choose shorter times for longer battery life. The default setting is one minute. 31: Exp. Delay Mode (All Modes) Select On to delay shutter release until about 0.4 s after the shutterrelease button is pressed, reducing camera shake in situations in which the least camera movement could result in blurred photographs (for example, microscope photography). The default option is Off. Menu Guide / Custom Settings 99 32: MB-D80 Batteries (All Modes) To ensure that the camera functions as expected when AA batteries are used in the optional MB-D80 battery pack, match the option selected in this menu to the type of batteries inserted in the battery pack. There is no need to adjust this option when using EN-EL3e batteries. Option LR6 (AA alkaline) (default) HR6 (AA Ni-MH) FR6 (AA lithium) ZR6 (AA Ni-Mn) Description Select when using LR6 alkaline AA batteries. Select when using HR6 NiMH AA batteries. Select when using FR6 lithium AA batteries. Select when using ZR6 nickel-manganese AA batteries. Using AA Batteries EN-EL3e batteries are recommended for best performance. Fewer pictures can be taken with AA batteries than with EN-EL3e batteries. The capacity of AA batteries drops sharply at temperatures below 20 ˚C (68 ˚F) and varies with make and storage conditions; in some cases, batteries may cease to function before their expiry date. Some AA batteries can not be used; due to their performance characteristics and limited capacity, alkaline and nickel-manganese batteries should only be used when no other alternative is available. The camera shows the level of AA batteries as follows: Control panel Viewfinder – (blinks) (blinks) Description Batteries fully charged. Low battery. Ready fresh batteries. Shutter release disabled. Insert fresh batteries. 100 Menu Guide / Custom Settings Basic Camera Settings: The Setup Menu The setup menu contains the options listed below (options displayed may differ if My Menu is selected for CSM/Setup menu). See “Using Camera Menus” ( 9) for more information on using the menus. The following options are available when To display the following options, select Full Simple (the default option) is selected for for CSM/Setup menu: CSM/Setup menu: Option Option CSM/Setup menu Format memory card World time LCD brightness Video mode Language USB 101–102 102 103 103 103 103 104 Image comment 104 Folders 105 File no. sequence 106 106 Mirror lock-up * Dust off ref photo 106–107 Battery info 107 Firmware version 108 Auto image rotation 108 * Not available at battery levels of or below or when camera is powered by optional MBD80 battery pack with AA batteries. CSM / Setup Menu Choose the options displayed in the menus. Option Simple (default) Full My menu Description Display only basic options in the Custom Settings ( 86) and setup menus (see above). Other menus list all options. Display all options in all menus. Display only selected options in the playback, shooting, Custom Settings, setup, and retouch menus. To choose menu items for display with My menu: My menu and press the multi selector right. 1 Highlight menu names will be displayed. A list of Highlight a menu name and press OK. The items in the selected 2 menu will be listed as shown at right (the illustration shows the items listed when the playback menu is selected). The CSM / Setup menu item in the setup menu can not be selected. Menu Guide / Basic Camera Settings: The Setup Menu 101 the multi selector up or down to highlight items and then 3 Press press to the right to select or deselect. Selected items are indicated by a check mark. Done and press OK to return to the list of menu names 4 Highlight shown in Step 1. Repeat steps 2–3 to edit additional menus. Done in the list of menu names and press OK to return 5 Highlight setup menu. Format Memory Card Select Yes to format the memory card. Note that this permanently deletes all photographs and any other data the card may contain. Be sure that any valued files have been copied to a computer before formatting. Formatting Memory Cards Do not turn the camera off or remove the memory card while formatting is in progress. Two-Button Format Memory cards can also be formatted with the ( and 102 Menu Guide / Basic Camera Settings: The Setup Menu ) buttons ( 44). World Time Set the camera clock to the current date and time. Option Description Choose the time zone. The camera clock will automatically be Time zone reset to the time in the selected zone. Set the camera clock ( 14). Reset the clock regularly for acDate curate time keeping. Date Choose the order in which the month, day, and year are disformat played. Daylight Turn daylight saving time on or off. The camera clock is autosaving time matically advanced or set back one hour. LCD Brightness Adjust monitor brightness between –2 (darkest) and +2 (brightest). Video Mode Choose NTSC when connecting the camera to an NTSC television or VCR. Choose PAL when connecting the camera to a PAL video device. Language Choose the language for camera menus and messages from: De En Es Fi Fr It Nl Pl Deutsch English Español Suomi Français Italiano Nederlands Polski German English Spanish Finnish French Italian Dutch Polish Pt Português Ru Русский Sv Svenska Portuguese Russian Swedish Traditional Chinese Simplified Chinese Japanese Korean The Clock Battery The camera clock is powered by an independent, rechargeable power source, which is charged as necessary when the main battery is installed or the camera is powered by an optional EH-5/ EH-5a AC adapter. Two days of charging will power the clock for about one month. If flashes in the control panel, the clock battery is exhausted and the clock has been reset to a time starting at 2006.01.01.00:00:00. Set the clock to the correct date and time. Menu Guide / Basic Camera Settings: The Setup Menu 103 USB Choose a USB option for connection to a computer or PictBridge printer. Choose MTP/PTP when connecting to a PictBridge printer or using Camera Control Pro 2 or Camera Control Pro (both available separately). See “Connecting to a Computer” for information on selecting a USB option for use with Nikon Transfer ( 67). Image Comment Add a comment to photographs as they are taken. Comments can be viewed in ViewNX (supplied) or Capture NX (available separately; 123). • Done: Save changes and return to the setup menu. • Input comment: The following dialog will be displayed. Input a comment as described below. Image Comment to Keyboard area: Use multi selector to highlight letters, press select. Name area: Comment appears here. To move cursor, press button and use multi selector. Comments can be up to thirty-six characters long. Any additional characters will be deleted. To delete the character at the current cursor position, press . Press OK to save changes and return to the image comment menu, or press to exit without changing the comment. • Attach comment: A comment is added to all photographs taken while this option is checked. Highlight this option and press the multi selector to the right to toggle the check mark on or off. 104 Menu Guide / Basic Camera Settings: The Setup Menu Folders Create, rename, or delete folders or choose the folder in which new photographs will be stored. • Select folder: Choose the folder in which subsequent photographs will be stored. NCD80 (default folder) Current folder Other folders (in alphabetical order) • New: Create a new folder and name it as described in “Naming Folders,” below. • Rename: Select a folder from a list and rename it as described in “Naming Folders,” below. • Delete: Delete all empty folders on the memory card. Naming Folders Keyboard area: Use multi selector to highlight letters, press to select. Name area: Folder name appears here. To move cursor, press button and use multi selector. Folder names can be up to five characters long. Any additional characters will be deleted. To delete the character at the current cursor position, press . Press OK to save changes and return to the setup menu, or press to exit without creating a new folder or changing the folder name. Folder Names On the memory card, folder names are preceded by a three-digit folder number assigned automatically by the camera (e.g., 100NCD80). Each folder can contain up to 999 photographs. During shooting, pictures are stored in the highest-numbered folder with the selected name. If a photograph is taken when the current folder if full or contains a photograph numbered 9999, the camera will create a new folder by adding one to the current folder number (e.g., 101NCD80). The camera treats folders with the same name but different folder numbers as the same folder. For example, if the folder NIKON is selected for Select folder, photographs in all folders named NIKON (100NIKON, 101NIKON, 102NIKON, etc.) will be visible when Current is selected for Playback folder ( 75). Renaming changes all folders with the same name but leaves the folder numbers intact. Menu Guide / Basic Camera Settings: The Setup Menu 105 File No. Sequence Choose how the camera names files. • Off (default): File numbering is reset to 0001 when a new folder is created, the memory card is formatted, or a new memory card is inserted. • On: File numbering continues from the last number used after a new folder is created, the memory card is formatted, or a new memory card is inserted. If a photograph is taken when the current folder contains a photograph numbered 9999, a new folder will be created and file numbering will begin again from 0001. • Reset: As for On, except that file numbering is reset to 0001 with the next photograph taken (if the current folder already contains photographs, a new folder will be created). File Numbering If the current folder is numbered 999 and contains 999 photographs or a photograph numbered 9999, the shutter release will be disabled. If File no. sequence is on, turn it off and format the memory card or insert another memory card in the camera. Mirror Lock-Up Lock the mirror in the up position when inspecting or cleaning the lowpass filter that protects the camera image sensor ( 125). Dust Off Ref Photo Acquire reference data for the Image Dust Off option in Capture NX (available separately; for more information, see the Capture NX manual). On and press the multi selector right. The message 1 Highlight shown at right will be displayed, and “rEF” will be displayed in the control panel and viewfinder. 106 Menu Guide / Basic Camera Settings: The Setup Menu With the lens ten centimeters (four inches) from a well-lit, featureless white object, 2 frame the object so that it fills the viewfinder and then press the shutter-release button halfway. In autofocus mode, focus will automatically be set to infinity; in manual focus mode, set focus to infinity manually. the shutter-release button the rest of the way down to acquire Image Dust Off 3 Press reference data. The monitor turns off when the shutter-release button is pressed. If the reference object is too bright or too dark, the camera may be unable to acquire Image Dust Off reference data and the message shown at right will be displayed. Choose another reference object and repeat the process from Step 1. Image Dust Off Dust off ref photo is available with CPU lenses only. A lens with a focal length of at least 50 mm is recommended. If using a zoom lens, zoom all the way in. The same reference image can be used for photographs taken with different lenses or at different apertures. Reference images can not be viewed using computer imaging software. A grid pattern is displayed when reference images are viewed on the camera. Battery Info View information on the EN-EL3e rechargeable Li-ion battery currently inserted in the camera. (If the camera is powered by an optional MBD80 battery pack containing EN-EL3e batteries, information for each battery will be listed separately. Battery info can not be displayed when MB-D80 is used with AA batteries). Option Description Bat. meter The current battery level as a percentage of full charge. The number of times the shutter has been released since the battery was last charged. Pic. meter Note that the camera may sometimes release the shutter without recording a photograph (e.g., when measuring a value for preset white balance). A five-level display showing battery age, from 0 (new) to 4 (displayed when the battery has reached the end of its charging life and requires replacement). Note that charging Charge life life may be temporarily reduced if the battery has been charged at low temperatures; the display will return to normal if the battery is charged again at room temperature. Menu Guide / Basic Camera Settings: The Setup Menu 107 Firmware Version View the current camera firmware version. Auto Image Rotation Photographs taken while On (the default option) is selected contain information on camera orientation, allowing them to be rotated automatically during playback ( 61) or when viewed in ViewNX (supplied) or Capture NX (available separately; 123). * The following orientations are recorded: Landscape (wide) orientation Camera rotated 90 ° clockwise Camera rotated 90 ° counter-clockwise * In continuous mode ( 36), orientation recorded for first shot applies to all images in same burst, even if camera orientation is changed during shooting. Camera orientation is not recorded when Off is selected. Choose this option when taking photographs with the lens pointing up or down. 108 Menu Guide / Basic Camera Settings: The Setup Menu Creating Retouched Copies: The Retouch Menu The options in the retouch menu are used to create trimmed, resized, or retouched copies of the photographs on the memory card. The following options are available (options displayed may differ if My menu is selected for the CSM/Setup option in the setup menu; 101). See “Using Camera Menus” ( 9) for more information on using the menus. Option D-lighting Red-eye correction Trim Monochrome Filter effects Small picture Image overlay Description Brighten dark or back-lit subjects. Correct “red-eye” caused by the flash. Create cropped copies of existing photographs. Copy pictures in black-and-white, sepia, or cyanotype. Create copies with color filter effects. Create small copies of existing photographs. Combine two RAW photographs into a single image. 110 111 111 112 112 112–113 114–115 Except in the case of Image overlay, the photographs to be copied can be selected in fullframe playback or from the retouch menu. To copy photos during full-frame playback: 1 2 Display photo in full-frame playback ( 3 61). Display retouch menu. 4 Highlight menu item. * Display retouch options. † * Image overlay is not available during full-frame playback. † If sub-menu is displayed, repeat Steps 2–3 to select options from sub-menu. To exit to full-frame playback without creating modified copy, press button. Retouching Copies Copies created with Small picture or Trim can not be further modified. D-lighting, red-eye correction, and filter effects can not be applied to monochrome copies. Otherwise the options in the retouch menu can each be applied once to existing copies, although this may result in loss of quality. Image Quality Small picture creates JPEG Fine copies (1 : 4 compression ratio). Image overlay creates copies at the current image quality setting. Other options copy RAW photos as JPEG Fine quality images; save where otherwise noted, copies created from RAW photos are 3,872 × 2,592 pixels in size. Menu Guide / Creating Retouched Copies: The Retouch Menu 109 To copy photos from the retouch menu: 1 2 Highlight menu item. 3 Display selection screen. 4 Highlight photo. * Display retouch options. † * Photos can also be highlighted using command dials: main command dial moves cursor horizontally, sub-command dial moves cursor vertically. To view selected picture full frame, press and hold button. button. † To exit to playback mode without creating modified copy, press D-Lighting D-lighting brightens shadows, making it ideal for dark or back-lit photographs. Before After Press the multi selector up or down to choose the amount of correction performed. The effect can be previewed in the edit display. Press OK to copy the photograph and return to the retouch menu or full-frame playback. Retouching Photographs The D80 may be unable to display or retouch photographs that were created with other models of camera or that have been modified using a computer or other device. 110 Menu Guide / Creating Retouched Copies: The Retouch Menu Red-Eye Correction Selecting this option displays a preview image as shown below. Confirm the effects of redeye correction and create a corrected copy as described in the following table. Note that red-eye correction may not always produce the expected results and may in very rare circumstances be applied to portions of the image that are not affected by red eye; check the preview thoroughly before proceeding. Red-eye correction is available only with photographs taken using the flash. To Use Zoom in and out / View other areas of image Create copy Description Press to zoom in, to zoom out. While photo is zoomed in, press multi selector up, down, left, or right to view areas of image not visible in monitor. Keep multi selector pressed to scroll rapidly to other areas of frame. Navigation window is displayed while / button or multi selector is pressed; area currently visible in monitor is indicated by yellow border. If the camera detects red eye in the selected photograph, a copy will be created that has been processed to reduce its effects. No copy will be created if the camera is unable to detect red eye. Trim Choosing this option displays the selected image full frame as shown below. To create a cropped copy of the selected image: To Reduce or increase size of crop View other areas of image Create copy Use / Description Press to reduce crop size, to increase. Press multi selector up, down, left, or right to view areas of image not visible in monitor. Save the area currently visible in the monitor as a separate file and return to the retouch menu or full-frame playback. Trim: Image Quality and Size Copies created from NEF (RAW) or NEF (RAW)+JPEG photos (NEF (RAW), NEF (RAW) + JPEG Fine, NEF (RAW) + JPEG Normal, and NEF (RAW) + JPEG Basic) have an image quality of JPEG Fine; cropped copies created from JPEG photos (JPEG Fine, JPEG Normal, and JPEG Basic) have the same image quality as the original. Depending on the size of the crop, the copy may be 2,560 × 1,920, 1,920 × 1,440, 1,280 × 960, 960 × 720, or 640 × 480 pixels in size. Menu Guide / Creating Retouched Copies: The Retouch Menu 111 Monochrome Choose from Black-and-white, Sepia, and Cyanotype (blue and white monochrome). Selecting Sepia or Cyanotype displays a preview of the selected image; press the multi selector up to increase color saturation, down to decrease. Press OK to create a monochrome copy and return to the retouch menu or full-frame playback. Filter Effects Choose from the following options. After adjusting filter effects as described below, press OK to copy the photograph and return to the retouch menu or full-frame playback. Option Skylight Warm filter Color balance Description Creates the effect of a sky light filter, making the picture less blue. The effect can be previewed in the monitor as shown at right. Creates a copy with warm tone filter effects, giving the copy “warm” red cast. The effect can be previewed in the monitor. Press the multi selector up to increase the amount of green, right to increase the amount of red, left to increase the amount of blue, or down to increase the amount of magenta. The effect is displayed in the monitor together with red, green, and blue histograms giving the distribution of tones in the copy ( 63). Small Picture Create a small copy of the selected picture. The following sizes are available: Option 640 × 480 320 × 240 160 × 120 Description Suited to television playback. Suited to display on Web pages. Suitable for e-mail. The small picture option can be used during full-frame playback as described on page 109. The procedure for selecting pictures after choosing Small picture from the retouch menu, however, differs from that described at the beginning of this section: instead of selecting a single photograph and then choosing a picture size, the user selects a picture size first and then selects one or more photographs to copy at the selected size as described on the following page. 112 Menu Guide / Creating Retouched Copies: The Retouch Menu Selecting Small picture from the retouch menu displays the menu shown in Step 1. Follow the steps below to create small copies of multiple pictures. 1 2 Highlight Choose size. 3 Display options. 4 Highlight desired picture size. 5 Make selection and return to previous menu. 6 Highlight Select picture. 7 Display selection screen. 8 Select pictures ( 74). Selected pictures are icon. marked with 9 Confirmation dialog displayed. 10 Highlight Yes. * Copy photos and return to retouch menu. * To return to Step 7 without creating copies, highlight No and press OK. Press MENU to exit to retouch menu without creating copies. Viewing Small Pictures Small pictures are indicated by a gray border during full-frame playback. Playback zoom is not available when small pictures are displayed. Menu Guide / Creating Retouched Copies: The Retouch Menu 113 Image Overlay Image overlay combines two existing RAW photographs to create a single picture that is saved separately from the originals. The new picture is saved at current image quality and size settings; before creating an overlay, set image quality and size ( 33; all options are available). To create a RAW image, choose an image quality of NEF (RAW). Image overlay in the retouch menu and press the multi 1 Highlight selector right. The preview dialog shown at right will be displayed with Image 1 highlighted. 2 Press OK. A picture selection dialog will be displayed. the multi selector left or right to highlight the first photo3 Press graph in the overlay. To view the highlighted photograph full frame, press and hold the button. OK to select the highlighted image and return to the preview 4 Press display. The selected image will appear as Image 1. exposure for the overlay by pressing the multi selector 5 Optimize up or down to select the gain for image 1 from between 0.1 and 2.0. The default value is 1.0; selecting 0.5 cuts gain in half, while selecting 2.0 doubles gain. The effects of gain are visible in the Preview column. Press the multi selector left or right to highlight Image 2. Repeat 6 Steps 2–5 to select the second photo and adjust gain. 114 Menu Guide / Creating Retouched Copies: The Retouch Menu the multi selector left or right to highlight the Preview col7 Press umn. Press the multi selector up or down to highlight one of the following options and press OK. • Overlay: Preview the overlay as shown at right. Press OK to save the new image. To return to Step 6 and select new photos or adjust gain, press . • Save: Save the overlay without viewing a preview. After an overlay is created, the camera will enter full-frame playback ( 61) with the new picture displayed in the monitor. + Image Overlay Only RAW photographs created with the D80 can be selected for image overlay. Other images are not displayed on the selection screen. Hidden images are also not displayed on the selection screen and can not be selected. The overlay has the same photo info (including date of recording, metering, shutter speed, aperture, exposure mode, exposure compensation, focal length, and image orientation) and values for white balance and optimize image as the photograph selected for Image 1. Menu Guide / Creating Retouched Copies: The Retouch Menu 115 Technical Notes Optional Accessories One advantage of digital SLR cameras is the wide variety of accessories they support. See our web sites or product catalogs for up-to-date information on accessories for the D80. Battery packs Flash units (Speedlights) Viewfinder accessories Lenses Batteries AC adapters ML-L3 remote control Filters MC-DC1 remote cord Software Use Only Nikon Brand Electronic Accessories Only Nikon brand accessories certified by Nikon specifically for use with your Nikon digital camera are engineered and proven to operate within its operational and safety requirements. THE USE OF NON-NIKON ACCESSORIES COULD DAMAGE YOUR CAMERA AND MAY VOID YOUR NIKON WARRANTY. Picture Angle and Focal Length The size of the area exposed by a 35mm camera is 36 × 24 mm. The size of the area exposed by the D80, in contrast, is 23.6 × 15.8 mm, meaning that the picture angle of a 35mm camera is approximately 1.5 times that of the D80. The approximate focal length of lenses for the D80 in 35mm format can be calculated by multiplying the focal length of the lens by about 1.5. Picture size (35mm format) (36 × 24 mm) Lens f-number The f-number given in lens names is the maximum aperture of the lens. 116 Technical Notes / Optional Accessories Picture diagonal Lens Picture size (D80) (23.6 × 15.8 mm) Picture angle (35mm format) Picture angle (D80) Lenses CPU lenses (particularly type G and D lenses) are recommended for use with the D80. CPU lenses can be identified by the presence of CPU contacts, type G and D lenses by a letter on the lens barrel. Type G lenses are not equipped with a lens aperture ring. Aperture ring CPU lens Type G lens Type D lens The following CPU lenses can be used with the D80. IX Nikkor CPU lenses can not be used. Camera setting Lens/accessory Type G or D AF Nikkor 2; AF-S, AF-I Nikkor PC-Micro Nikkor 85mm f/2.8D 3 AF-S/AF-I Teleconverter 5 Other AF Nikkor (except lenses for F3AF) AI-P Nikkor AF ✔ — ✔6 ✔7 — Focus M (with electronic rangefinder) ✔ ✔4 ✔6 ✔7 ✔8 M ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ Mode Digital Vari Program, P, S, A ✔ — ✔ ✔ ✔ Metering M ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ , , 1 ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ • AF-S NIKKOR VR: 400 mm f/2.8G ED, 500 mm f/4G ED*, 600 mm f/4G 1. Spot metering meters selected focus area. ED* 2. Vibration Reduction (VR) supported with VR lenses. 3. Camera exposure metering and flash control may not function when • AF-I: 300 mm f/2.8D ED, 400 mm f/2.8D ED, 500 mm f/4D ED*, 600 mm lens is shifted and/or tilted or aperture is not at maximum. f/4D ED* 4. Electronic rangefinder can not be used when shifting or tilting lens. * Autofocus not available with AF-S teleconverter TC-17E II/TC-20E II. 5. Compatible with the following lenses: 6. With maximum effective aperture of f/5.6 or faster. • AF-S: 80–200 mm f/2.8D ED, 300 mm f/2.8D ED II, 300 mm f/2.8D ED, 7. If AF 28–85 mm f/3.5–4.5, AF 28–85 mm f/3.5–4.5 <New>, AF 300 mm f/4D ED*, 400 mm f/2.8D ED II, 400 mm f/2.8D ED, 500 mm 35–70 mm f/2.8, or AF 80–200 mm f/2.8 is zoomed while focusing at f/4D ED II*, 500 mm f/4D ED*, 600 mm f/4D ED II*, 600 mm f/4D ED* minimum range, image on matter screen in viewfinder may not be in • AF-S VR: 70–200 mm f/2.8G ED, 200 mm f/2G ED, 200–400 mm f/4G focus when in-focus indicator is displayed. Focus manually using image ED, 300 mm f/2.8G ED in viewfinder as guide. • AF-S Micro VR: 105 mm f/2.8G ED (autofocus not supported) 8. With maximum aperture of f/5.6 or faster. Non-CPU Lenses The non-CPU lenses listed below may be used, but only when the camera is in mode M. Selecting another mode disables the shutter release. Aperture must be adjusted manually via the lens aperture ring and the camera autofocus system, metering, electronic analog exposure display, and TTL flash control can not be used. Except where otherwise noted, the electronic rangefinder can be used with lenses that have a maximum aperture of f/5.6 or faster. • AI-, AI-modified NIKKOR, or Nikon Series E lenses • AI-type teleconverter * • Medical-NIKKOR 120 mm f/4 (can only be used • Bellows Focusing Attachment PB-6 (attach in at shutter speeds slower than 1/60 s) vertical orientation; can be used in horizontal • Reflex-NIKKOR (electronic rangefinder can not orientation once attached) * be used) • Auto Extension Ring* PK-11A/12/13, PN-11 * Electronic rangefinder can be used if maximum ef• PC-NIKKOR (electronic rangefinder can not be fective aperture is f/5.6 or faster. used when shifting or tilting lens) Technical Notes / Optional Accessories 117 Incompatible Non-CPU Lenses and Accessories The following non-CPU lenses and accessories can NOT be used: • AF Teleconverter TC-16A • Non-AI lenses • Lenses that require the Focusing Unit AU-1 (400 mm f/4.5, 600 mm f/5.6, 800 mm f/8, 1200 mm f/11) • Fisheye (6 mm f/5.6, 8 mm f/8, OP 10 mm f/5.6) • 2.1 cm f/4 • Extension Ring K2 • 180–600 mm f/8 ED (serial numbers 174041–174180) • 360–1200 mm f/11 ED (serial numbers 174031–174127) • 200–600 mm f/9.5 (serial numbers 280001–300490) • AF-Nikkor lenses for the F3AF (AF 80mm f/2.8, AF 200mm f/3.5 ED, AF Teleconverter TC-16) • PC 28 mm f/4 (serial number 180900 or earlier) • PC 35 mm f/2.8 (serial numbers 851001–906200) • Old-model PC 35 mm f/3.5 • Old-model Reflex 1000 mm f/6.3 • Reflex 1000 mm f/11 (serial numbers 142361–143000) • Reflex 2000 mm f/11 (serial numbers 200111–200310) AF-Assist Illumination/Red-Eye Reduction AF-assist illumination is not available with the following lenses: • AF-S NIKKOR 14–24mm f/2.8G ED • AF 80–200 mm f/2.8D ED • AF-S VR 70–200 mm f/2.8G ED • AF-S 80–200 mm f/2.8D ED • AF-S VR 200–400 mm f/4G ED • AF VR 80–400 mm f/4.5–5.6D ED • AF-S VR 200 mm f/2G ED At ranges under 1 m (3 ft. 3 in.), the following lenses may block the AF-assist illuminator and interfere with autofocus when lighting is poor: • AF-S DX 12–24 mm f/4G ED • AF-S 17–35 mm f/2.8D ED • AF-S DX 17–55 mm f/2.8G ED • AF 18–35 mm f/3.5–4.5D ED • AF-S DX 18–70 mm f/3.5–4.5G ED • AF-S DX VR 18–200 mm f/3.5–5.6G • AF 20–35 mm f/2.8D • AF-S NIKKOR 24–70mm f/2.8G ED • AF-S 24–85 mm f/3.5–4.5G ED • AF 24–85 mm f/2.8–4D • AF-S VR 24–120 mm f/3.5–5.6G ED • AF 24–120 mm f/3.5–5.6D • AF-S 28–70 mm f/2.8D ED • AF 28–200 mm f/3.5–5.6G ED • AF Micro 70–180 mm f/4.5–5.6D ED • AF-S VR Micro 105 mm f/2.8G ED • AF Micro 200 mm f/4D ED Lenses that block the subject’s view of the AF-assist illuminator can interfere with red-eye reduction. The Built-in Flash The built-in flash can be used with CPU lenses with focal lengths of 18 – 300 mm. The flash may be unable to light the entire subject with the following lenses at ranges less than those given below: Lens Zoom position 20 mm AF-S DX 12–24 mm f/4G ED 24 mm 24 mm AF-S 17–35 mm f/2.8D ED 28 mm, 35 mm AF-S DX 17–55 mm f/2.8G ED Min. range 2.0 m / 6 ft. 7 in. 1.0 m / 3 ft. 3 in. 2.0 m / 6 ft. 7 in. 1.0 m / 3 ft. 3 in. 28 mm 1.5 m / 4 ft. 11 in. 35 mm 1.0 m / 3 ft. 3 in. AF 18–35 mm f/3.5– 24 mm 4.5D ED AF-S DX 18–70 mm 18 mm f/3.5–4.5G ED AF-S DX 18–135 mm 18 mm f/3.5–5.6G ED AF-S DX VR 18– 24 mm, 35 mm 200 mm f/3.5–5.6G ED 1.0 m / 3 ft. 3 in. 1.0 m / 3 ft. 3 in. 1.5 m / 4 ft. 11 in. Lens AF 20–35 mm f/2.8D AF-S NIKKOR 24–70 mm f/2.8G ED AF-S VR 24–120 mm f/3.5–5.6G ED AF-S 28–70 mm f/2.8D ED AF-S VR 200–400 mm f/4G ED Zoom position Min. range 20 mm 1.5 m / 4 ft. 11 in. 24 mm 1.0 m / 3 ft. 3 in. 35 mm 1.0 m / 3 ft. 3 in. 24 mm 1.0 m / 3 ft. 3 in. 35 mm 1.5 m / 4 ft. 11 in. 50 mm 1.0 m / 3 ft. 3 in. 200 mm 3.0 m / 9 ft. 10 in. 250 mm, 300 mm 2.5 m / 8 ft. 2 in. 1.0 m / 3 ft. 3 in. When used with the AF-S NIKKOR 14–24 mm f/2.8G ED, the flash will be unable to light the entire subject at all ranges. The built-in flash can also be used with compatible non-CPU lenses with a focal length of 18–200 mm. AI and AI-S 200 mm f/2 ED lenses can not be used. Restrictions apply with the following lenses: • AI-S 25–50 mm f/4, AI 25–50 mm f/4, AI-S 35–70 mm f/4: at 35mm zoom position, use at ranges of 1 m (3 ft. 3 in.) or more • AI, AI-modified, and AI-S ED 50–300 mm f/4.5, AI-modified 85–250 mm f/4: use at 135mm or above 118 Technical Notes / Optional Accessories Optional Flash Units (Speedlights) Use the accessory shoe to mount optional flash units directly on the camera without a sync cable. The accessory shoe is equipped with a safety lock for Speedlights with a locking pin, such as the SB-800, SB-600 and SB-400. Before attaching an optional flash unit, remove the accessory shoe cover. The built-in flash will not fire when an optional Speedlight is attached. When used with compatible flash units such as the optional SB-800 and SB-600 Speedlights or SB-R200 wireless remote Speedlight, the D80 supports the advanced Nikon Creative Lighting System (CLS), including i-TTL flash control ( 141), FV lock (locks flash level; 92), and Auto FP High-Speed Sync (synchronizes the flash and shutter at high shutter speeds). With the built-in flash in commander mode, the D80 can be used to control remote SB-800, SB-600, and SB-R200 flash units. See the Speedlight manual for details. SB-800, SB-600, and SB-400 Speedlights These high-performance Speedlights have Guide Numbers of 38/125 (35mm zoom head position), 30/98 (35mm zoom head position), and 21/69 respectively (m/ft, ISO 100, 20 °C/68 °F). The flash head can be rotated through 90 ° above the horizontal for bounce-flash or close-up photography. The SB-800 and SB-600 can also be rotated 180 ° left, and 90 ° right, and the SB-800 can be rotated 7 ° below the horizontal. The SB-800 and SB-600 support auto power zoom (24–105 mm and 24–85 mm, respectively), ensuring that the illuminating angle is adjusted in accord with lens focal length and have both a built-in wide panel that can be used for an angle of 14 mm (the SB-800 also supports 17 mm) and an illuminator that can be used when adjusting settings in the dark. Use Only Nikon Flash Accessories Use only Nikon Speedlights. Negative voltages or voltages over 250 V applied to the accessory shoe could not only prevent normal operation, but damage the sync circuitry of the camera or flash. Before using a Nikon Speedlight not listed in this section, contact a Nikon-authorized service representative for more information. Guide Number To calculate the range of the flash at an ISO sensitivity of 100, divide the Guide Number by the aperture. For example, the built-in flash has a Guide Number of 13 m or 42 ft. (ISO 100, 20 °C/68 °F); its range at an aperture of f/5.6 is 13 ÷ 5.6 or about 2.3 meters (or in feet,42 ÷ 5.6 = about 7.5 ft). With Guide Numbers of 38 and 30, the SB-800 and SB-600 respectively have ranges of about 6.8 and 5.4 meters (22.3 and 17.5 feet) at f/5.6 (35mm zoom head position). The AS-15 Accessory Shoe Adapter When the AS-15 accessory shoe adapter (available separately) is mounted on the camera accessory shoe, flash accessories can be connected via a sync cable. Technical Notes / Optional Accessories 119 SB-R200 Wireless Remote Speedlight This high-performance wireless remote Speedlight has a Guide Number of 10/32 (m/ft, ISO 100, 20 °C/68 °F). Although it can not be mounted directly on the accessory shoe, the SBR200 servers as a remote flash when the built-in flash is in commander mode. It can also be controlled using an optional SB-800 Speedlight or SU-800 wireless Speedlight commander. The SB-R200 can be hand-held, placed on an AS-20 Speedlight stand, or mounted on the camera lens using the SX-1 attachment for remote control and close-up i-TTL photography. The following features are available with CLS-compatible flash units: Speedlight Flash mode/feature i-TTL2, 3 AA Auto aperture 2 A Non-TTL auto GN Range-priority manual M Manual RPT Repeating flash REAR Rear-curtain sync Red-eye reduction Flash Color Information Communication Auto FP High-Speed Sync 6 FV Lock AF-assist for multi-area AF 2 Auto zoom Auto ISO Advanced Wireless Lighting Commander Remote SB-800 SB-600 SB-400 SB-800 SU-800 1 SB-800 SB-600 SB-R200 ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ — — — — ✔4 ✔6 ✔5 ✔5 — — — — — ✔5 ✔5 ✔4 — — — — — — — ✔ — ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ — — — ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ — — — — ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ — — — — ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ — ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ — — — — ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ — — — — — ✔ ✔ ✔ — — — — — ✔ ✔ ✔ 1. Options shown are only available when SU-800 is used to control other 4. Use Speedlight controls to select flash mode. Non-TTL auto is selected flash units. automatically when a non-CPU lens is attached. 2. CPU lens required. 5. Auto aperture is selected automatically if CPU lens is attached. Non-TTL 3. Standard i-TTL for Digital SLR is used with spot metering or when se- auto is selected automatically if non-CPU lens is attached. lected with Speedlight. Otherwise i-TTL Balanced Fill-Flash for Digital 6. Use Speedlight controls to select flash mode. SLR is used. The following Speedlights can be used in non-TTL auto and manual modes. If they are set to TTL, the camera shutter-release button will lock and no photographs can be taken. Speedlight SB-80DX, SB-28DX, SB-28, Flash mode SB-26, SB-25, SB-24 A Non-TTL auto ✔ M Manual ✔ RPT Repeating flash ✔ REAR Rear-curtain sync ✔ SB-50DX, SB-23, SB-29 1 SB-21B1, SB-29s 1 — ✔ — ✔ SB-30, SB-27 2, SB-22S, SB-22, SB-20, SB-16B, SB-15 ✔ ✔ — ✔ 1. Autofocus is available only with AF-Micro lenses (60 mm, 105 mm, or 2. When mounted on D80, flash mode is automatically set to TTL and shut70–180 mm). ter release is disabled. Set Speedlight to A (non-TTL auto) mode. 120 Technical Notes / Optional Accessories Notes on Optional Speedlights Refer to the Speedlight manual for detailed instructions. If the Speedlight supports the Creative Lighting System, refer to the section on CLS-compatible digital SLR cameras. The D80 is not included in the “digital SLR” category in the SB-80DX, SB-28DX, and SB-50DX manuals. If an optional Speedlight is attached with the camera in a Digital Vari-Program mode, the flash will fire whenever a photograph is taken. The following flash modes are available: • P, , , , , , and modes: Fill flash and red-eye reduction. Fill flash is automatically selected if the flash mode is set to off or auto when an optional Speedlight is attached. Auto with red-eye reduction becomes red-eye reduction. mode: Auto slow sync becomes slow sync, auto slow sync with red-eye reduction becomes slow • sync with red-eye reduction, and off becomes slow sync. If AUTO is selected for ISO sensitivity in Digital Vari-Program modes or On is selected for Custom Setting 7 (ISO Auto) in P, S, A, or M mode, ISO sensitivity will be adjusted for optimal flash output when an optional SB-800, SB-600, or SB-400 Speedlight is attached. This may result in foreground subjects being underexposed in photographs taken with the flash at slow shutter speeds, in daylight, or against a bright background. Choose a flash mode other than slow sync or choose a larger aperture. If Auto FP High Speed Sync is used, the shutter will synchronize with an external flash at speeds of ½00 s or slower. i-TTL flash control can be used at ISO sensitivities between 100 and 1600. Higher values may not produce the desired results at some ranges or apertures. If the flash-ready indicator blinks for about three seconds after a photograph is taken, the flash has fired at full power and the photograph may be underexposed. The optional SB-800 and SB-600 Speedlights and SU-800 wireless Speedlight commander provide active AF assist illumination for the following focus areas: • 24–34 mm AF lens • 35–105 mm AF lens The SB-800, SB-600, and SB-400 also provide red-eye reduction. With other Speedlights, the camera AF assist illuminator is used for AF-assist illumination and red-eye reduction. In the following modes, the maximum aperture (minimum f-number) selectable by the camera is limited according to ISO sensitivity ( 43): Maximum aperture at ISO sensitivity of Mode 100 125 160 200 250 320 400 500 640 800 1000 1250 1600 4 4.2 4.5 4.8 5 5.3 5.6 6 6.3 6.7 7.1 7.6 8 P, , , , , , 5.6 6 6.3 6.7 7.1 7.6 8 8.5 9 9.5 10 11 11 For each one-step increase in sensitivity (e.g., from 200 to 400), aperture is stopped down by half an f/stop. If the maximum aperture of the lens is smaller than given above, the maximum value for aperture will be the maximum aperture of the lens. When an SC-series 17, 28, or 29 sync cable is used for off-camera flash photography, correct exposure may not be achieved in i-TTL mode. We recommend that you choose spot metering to select standard i-TTL flash control. Take a test shot and view the results in the monitor. In i-TTL mode, use the flash panel or bounce adapter provided with the Speedlight. Do not use other panels such as diffusion panels, as this may produce incorrect exposure. Auto power zoom is available only with SB-800 and SB-600 Speedlights. Technical Notes / Optional Accessories 121 Other Accessories • Diopter adjustment viewfinder lenses: Lenses are available with diopters of –5, –4, –3, –2, 0, +0.5, +1, +2, and +3 m–1. Use diopter adjustment lenses only if the desired focus can not be achieved with the built in diopter adjustment control (–2.0 to +1.0 m–1). Test diopter adjustment lenses before purchase to ensure that the desired focus can be achieved. • DK-21M magnifying eyepiece: Increases viewfinder magnification to approximately 1.10 × Viewfinder (50 mm f/1.4 lens at infinity; –1.0 m–1). eyepiece • DG-2 magnifier: Magnify the scene displayed in the center of the viewfinder for close-up accessories photography, copying, telephoto lenses, and other tasks that require added precision. Eyepiece adapter required (available separately). • DK-22 eyepiece adapter: Attach the DG-2 magnifier to the D80. • DR-6 right-angle viewing attachment: The DR-6 attaches at a right angle to the viewfinder eyepiece, allowing the image in the viewfinder to be viewed from above when the camera is in portrait orientation. • Nikon filters can be divided into three types: screw-in, slip-in, and rear-interchange. Use Nikon filters; other filters may interfere with autofocus or electronic range finding. • The D80 can not be used with linear polarizing filters. Use the C-PL circular polarizing filter instead. • The NC and L37C filters are recommended for protecting the lens. Filters • Moiré may occur if a filter is used when the subject is framed against a bright light or when a bright light source is in the frame. • Center-weighted metering is recommended with filters with exposure factors (filter factors) over 1 × (Y44, Y48, Y52, O56, R60, X0, X1, C-PL, ND2S, ND4, ND4S, ND8, ND8S, ND400, A2, A12, B2, B8, B12). Approved Memory Cards The following SD memory cards have been tested and approved for use in the D80. All cards of the designated make and capacity can be used, regardless of speed. SanDisk 64 MB, 128 MB, 256 MB, 512 MB, 1 GB, 2 GB *, 4 GB *† 128 MB, 256 MB, 512 MB, 1 GB, 2 GB * Toshiba 64 MB, 128 MB, 256 MB, 512 MB, 1 GB, 2 GB *, 4 GB *† Lexar Platinum II: 512 MB, 1 GB, 2 GB * Professional: 1 GB, 2 GB * Panasonic 64 MB, 128 MB, 256 MB, 512 MB, 1 GB, 2 GB *, 4 GB *† * If card will be used with card reader or other device, check that device sup- † SDHC compliant. If card will be used with card reader ports 2 GB and 4 GB cards. or other device, check that device supports SDHC. Operation is not guaranteed with other makes of card. Contact the manufacturer for details on the above cards. Memory Cards • Format memory cards in the camera before first use. • Turn the power off before inserting or removing memory cards. Do not remove memory cards from the camera, turn the camera off, or remove or disconnect the power source during formatting or while data are being recorded, deleted, or copied to a computer. Failure to observe these precautions could result in loss of data or in damage to the camera or card. • Do not touch the card terminals with your fingers or metal objects. • Do not apply force to the card casing. Failure to observe this precaution could damage the card. • Do not bend, drop, or subject to strong physical shocks. • Do not expose to heat, water, high levels of humidity, or direct sunlight. 122 Technical Notes / Optional Accessories Accessories for the D80 At the time of writing, the following accessories were available for the D80. Up to date information is available at Nikon websites or from our latest product catalogs. Power sources • EN-EL3e rechargeable Li-ion battery: Additional EN-EL3e batteries are available from local retailers and Nikon service representatives. EN-EL3a and EN-EL3 batteries can not be used. • MB-D80 Multi-Power battery pack: The MB-D80 takes one or two rechargeable Nikon EN-EL3e Li-ion batteries or six AA alkaline, Ni-MH, lithium, or nickel-manganese batteries. It is equipped with a shutter-release button, main and sub-command dials, and an AE-L/AF-L button for ease of use when taking photographs in tall (portrait) orientation. When attaching the MB-D80, remove the camera battery cover as shown at right. 35° • EH-5/EH-5a AC adapter: Use to power the camera for extended periods. • MC-DC1 remote cord: Prevents blur caused by camera shake and features a shutter-release button lock for long time-exposures. When connecting the MC-DC1, open the remote cord connector cover and insert the cord as shown. To prevent water from entering the camera, keep the remote cord connector cover Remote closed when not in use. controls • ML-L3 wireless remote control: Use as a remote shutter release for self-portraits or to prevent and cords blur caused by camera shake. The ML-L3 uses a 3 V CR2025 battery. • BF-1A Body Cap: The BF-1A keeps the mirror, viewfinder screen, and low-pass filter free of dust when a lens is not in place. • Capture NX: A complete photo editing package with support for RAW images. Use the latest version. • Camera Control Pro 2: Control the camera remotely from a computer and save photographs Software directly to the computer hard disk. Note: The D80 is also supported under Camera Control Pro version 1.1.0 and later. Capture NX and Camera Control Pro automatically checks for updates if an Internet connection is detected at startup. Be sure to update to the latest version. Body cap Technical Notes / Optional Accessories 123 Caring for the Camera Storage When the camera will not be used for an extended period, turn the camera off, replace the monitor cover, remove the battery, and store the battery in a cool, dry area with the terminal cover in place. To prevent mold or mildew, store the camera in a dry, well-ventilated area. Do not store the camera with naphtha or camphor moth balls or in locations that: • are poorly ventilated or subject to humidities of over 60% • are next to equipment that produces strong electromagnetic fields, such as televisions or radios • are exposed to temperatures above 50 ˚C/122 ˚F (for example, near a space heater or in a closed vehicle in a hot day) or below –10 ˚C (14 ˚F) Cleaning Use a blower to remove dust and lint, then wipe gently with a soft, dry cloth. After using the camera at the beach or seaside, wipe off sand or salt with a cloth lightly dampCamera body ened in distilled water and dry thoroughly. Important: Dust or other foreign matter inside the camera may cause damage not covered under warranty. These elements are made of glass and are easily damaged. Remove dust and lint with Lens, mirror, a blower. If using an aerosol blower, keep the can vertical to prevent the discharge of and viewfinder liquid. To remove fingerprints and other stains, apply a small amount of lens cleaner to a soft cloth and clean with care. Remove dust and lint with a blower. When removing fingerprints and other stains, Monitor wipe the surface lightly with a soft cloth or chamois leather. Do not apply pressure, as this could result in damage or malfunction. The Monitor Should the monitor break, care should be taken to avoid injury caused by broken glass and to prevent liquid crystal from the monitor from entering your eyes or mouth. The Control Panel In rare cases, static electricity may cause the control panel to brighten or darken. This does not indicate a malfunction, and the display will soon return to normal. 124 Technical Notes / Caring for the Camera The Low-Pass Filter The image sensor that acts as the camera’s picture element is fitted with a low-pass filter to prevent moiré. If you suspect that dirt or dust on the filter is appearing in photographs, you can clean the filter as described below. Note, however, that the filter is extremely delicate and easily damaged. Nikon recommends that the filter be cleaned only by Nikon-authorized service personnel. A reliable power source is required when inspecting or cleaning the low-pass filter. If the battery level is or below or the camera is powered by an optional MB-D80 battery pack with AA batteries, turn the camera off and insert a fully-charged EN-EL3e battery or connect an optional EH-5/EH-5a AC adapter. 1 Remove the lens and turn the camera on. Press the MENU 2 button to display the camera menus and select Mirror lock-up from the setup menu (note that this option is not available at battery levels of or below, while recording a multiple exposure, or when using an optional MB-D80 battery pack with AA batteries). The menu shown at right will be displayed. Highlight On and press OK. The message shown at right will 3 be displayed in the monitor and a row of dashes will appear in the control panel and viewfinder. To restore normal operation without inspecting the low-pass filter, turn the camera off. the shutter-release button all the way down. The mirror 4 Press will be raised and the shutter curtain will open, revealing the low-pass filter. The display in the viewfinder will turn off and the row of dashes in the control panel will blink. the camera so that light falls on the low-pass filter, 5 Holding examine the filter for dust or lint. If no foreign objects are present, proceed to Step 7. any dust and lint from the filter with a blower. Do 6 Remove not use a blower-brush, as the bristles could damage the filter. Dirt that can not be removed with a blower can only be removed by Nikon-authorized service personnel. Under no circumstances should you touch or wipe the filter. Technical Notes / Caring for the Camera 125 the camera off. The mirror will be lowered and the shutter curtain will close. Re7 Turn place the lens or body cap. Use a Reliable Power Source The shutter curtain is delicate and easily damaged. If the camera powers off while the mirror is raised, the curtain will close automatically. To prevent damage to the curtain, observe the following precautions: • Do not turn the camera off or remove or disconnect the power source while the mirror is raised. • If the battery runs low while the mirror is raised, a beep will sound and the AF-assist illuminator will blink to warn that the shutter curtain will close and the mirror will be lowered after about two minutes. End cleaning or inspection immediately. Foreign Matter on the Low-Pass Filter Nikon takes every possible precaution to prevent foreign matter from coming into contact with the low-pass filter during production and shipping. The D80, however, is designed to be used with interchangeable lenses, and foreign matter may enter the camera when lenses are removed or exchanged. Once inside the camera, this foreign matter may adhere to the low-pass filter, where it may appear in photographs taken under certain conditions. To protect the camera when no lens is in place, be sure to replace the body cap provided with the camera, being careful to first remove all dust and other foreign matter that may be adhering to the body cap. Should foreign matter find its way onto the low-pass filter, clean the filter as described above, or have the filter cleaned by authorized Nikon service personnel. Photographs affected by the presence of foreign matter on the filter can be retouched using Capture NX (available separately; 123) or the clean image options available in some third-party imaging applications. Servicing the Camera and Accessories The D80 is a precision device and requires regular servicing. Nikon recommends that the camera be inspected by the original retailer or Nikon service representative once every one to two years, and that it be serviced once every three to five years (note that fees apply to these services). Frequent inspection and servicing are particularly recommended if the camera is used professionally. Any accessories regularly used with the camera, such as lenses or optional Speedlights, should be included when the camera is inspected or serviced. 126 Technical Notes / Caring for the Camera Caring for the Camera and Battery: Cautions Do not drop: The product may malfunction if subjected to Cleaning: When cleaning the camera body, use a blower to gently remove dust and lint, then wipe gently with a soft, dry strong shocks or vibration. cloth. After using the camera at the beach or seaside, wipe Keep dry: This product is not waterproof, and may malfuncoff any sand or salt using a cloth lightly dampened in pure tion if immersed in water or exposed to high levels of huwater and then dry the camera thoroughly. In rare instances, midity. Rusting of the internal mechanism can cause irrepastatic electricity may cause the LCD displays to light up or go rable damage. dark. This does not indicate a malfunction, and the display Avoid sudden changes in temperature: Sudden changes in tem- will soon return to normal. perature, such as occur when entering or leaving a heated The lens and mirror are easily damaged. Dust and lint should building on a cold day, can cause condensation inside the be gently removed with a blower. When using an aerosol device. To prevent condensation, place the device in a carryblower, keep the can vertical to prevent discharge of liquid. ing case or plastic bag before exposing it to sudden changes To remove fingerprints and other stains from the lens, apply in temperature. a small amount of lens cleaner to a soft cloth and wipe the Keep away from strong magnetic fields: Do not use or store this lens carefully. device in the vicinity of equipment that generates strong See “ The Low-Pass Filter” ( 125) for information on cleanelectromagnetic radiation or magnetic fields. Strong static ing the low-pass filter. charges or the magnetic fields produced by equipment such as radio transmitters could interfere with the moni- Storage: To prevent mold or mildew, store the camera in a dry, tor, damage data stored on the memory card, or affect the well-ventilated area. If the product will not be used for an product’s internal circuitry. extended period, remove the battery to prevent leakage and store the camera in a plastic bag containing a desiccant. Do Do not leave the lens pointed at the sun: Do not leave the lens not, however, store the camera case in a plastic bag, as this pointed at the sun or other strong light source for an exmay cause the material to deteriorate. Note that desiccant tended period. Intense light may cause the image sensor to gradually loses its capacity to absorb moisture and should deteriorate or produce a white blur effect in photographs. be replaced at regular intervals. Blooming: Vertical white streaks may appear in photographs To prevent mold or mildew, take the camera out of storage of the sun or other strong light sources. This phenomenon, at least once a month. Turn the camera on and release the known as “blooming,” can be prevented by reducing the shutter a few times before putting it away. amount of light that falls on the image sensor, either by choosing a slow shutter speed and small aperture or by us- Store the battery in a cool, dry place. Replace the terminal ing an ND filter. cover before putting the battery away. Do not touch the shutter curtain: The shutter curtain is extremely thin and easily damaged. Under no circumstances should you exert pressure on the curtain, poke it with cleaning tools, or subject it to powerful air currents from a blower. These actions could scratch, deform, or tear the curtain. Notes on the monitor: The monitor may contain a few pixels that are always lit or that do not light. This is common to all TFT LCD monitors and does not indicate a malfunction. Images recorded with the product are unaffected. Images in the monitor may be difficult to see in a bright Handle all moving parts with care: Do not apply force to the bat- light. tery-chamber, card-slot, or connector covers. These parts Do not apply pressure to the monitor, as this could cause are especially susceptible to damage. damage or malfunction. Dust or lint on the monitor can be Turn the product off before removing or disconnecting the power removed with a blower. Stains can be removed by wiping source: Do not unplug the product or remove the battery lightly with a soft cloth or chamois leather. Should the moniwhile the product is on or while images are being recorded tor break, care should be taken to avoid injury from broken or deleted. Forcibly cutting power in these circumstances glass and to prevent liquid crystal from the monitor touchcould result in loss of data or in damage to product memory ing the skin or entering the eyes and mouth. or internal circuitry. To prevent an accidental interruption Replace the monitor cover when transporting the camera or of power, avoid carrying the product from one location to leaving it unattended. another while the AC adapter is connected. Lens contacts: Keep the lens contacts clean. Technical Notes / Caring for the Camera 127 Batteries: Dirt on the battery terminals can prevent the camera Charge the battery before use. When taking photographs on from functioning and should be removed with a soft, dry cloth important occasions, ready a spare EN-EL3e battery and keep it fully charged. Depending on your location, it may be difficult to before use. purchase replacement batteries on short notice. Batteries may leak or explode if improperly handled. Observe the following precautions when handling batteries: On cold days, the capacity of batteries tends to decrease. Be sure • Turn the product off before replacing the battery. the battery is fully charged before taking photographs outside • The battery may become hot when used for extended periods. in cold weather. Keep a spare battery in a warm place and exchange the two as necessary. Once warmed, a cold battery may Observe due caution when handling the battery. • Use only batteries approved for use in this equipment. recover some of its charge. • Do not expose the battery to flame or excessive heat. Continuing to charge the battery after it is fully charged can im• After removing the battery from the camera, be sure to replace pair battery performance. the terminal cover. Used batteries are a valuable resource. Please recycle used batteries in accord with local regulations. 128 Technical Notes / Caring for the Camera Troubleshooting If the camera fails to function as expected, check the list of common problems below before consulting your retailer or Nikon representative. Refer to the page numbers in the rightmost column for more information. Problem Camera takes time to turn on. Solution 65, 74, 105 Delete files or folders. Adjust viewfinder focus or use optional diopter adjust17, 122 ment lenses. Viewfinder is dark. Insert a fully-charged battery. 12 Choose longer delays for Custom Setting 27 (Monitor Displays turn off without warning. 98, 99 off) or 28 (Auto meter off). Unusual characters displayed in con- See “ A Note on Electronically-Controlled Cameras,” be— trol panel. low. Displays in control panel or view- The response times and brightness of these displays — finder are unresponsive and dim. varies with temperature. Fine lines are visible around active These phenomena are normal for this type of viewfindfocus area or display turns red when — er and do not indicate a malfunction. focus area is highlighted. Menu item is not displayed. Select Full for CSM / setup menu. 101 Rotate mode dial to another setting or insert memory Menu item can not be selected. card. Note that Battery info option is only available 107 when camera is powered by EN-EL3e battery. Image size can not be changed. Image quality set to NEF (RAW). 34 Digital Vari-Program mode selected or autoexposure 24, 94 Metering can not be changed. lock in effect. Exposure compensation not availChoose mode P, S, or A. 45 able. Can not measure white balance. Subject is too dark or too bright. 60 Image can not be selected as source Image was not created with D80. 82 for preset white balance. • NEF (RAW) or NEF + JPEG option selected for image White balance bracketing unavail- quality. 34, 59, able. • (Choose color temp.) selected for white balance. 84 • Multiple exposure in progress. Viewfinder is out of focus. A Note on Electronically-Controlled Cameras In extremely rare instances, unusual characters may appear in the control panel and the camera may stop functioning. In most cases, this phenomenon is caused by a strong external static charge. Turn the camera off, remove and replace the battery (note that the battery may be hot) or disconnect and reconnect the AC adapter, and turn the camera on again. If the problem persists, turn the camera off and press the reset switch (see right; note that this resets the clock). In the event of continued malfunction, contact your retailer or a Nikon-authorized service representative. Reset switch Connector cover Technical Notes / Troubleshooting 129 Problem Full range of shutter speeds not available. Can not select focus area. Focus does not lock when shutterrelease button is pressed halfway. Image in viewfinder is not in focus. AF-assist illuminator does not light. Shutter release is disabled. No photo taken when remote control shutter-release button is pressed. Only one shot taken each time shutter-release button is pressed in continuous shooting mode. Camera is slow to record photos. Date of recording is not correct. 130 Technical Notes / Troubleshooting Solution Flash in use. If On is selected for Custom Setting 25 (Auto FP) modes P, S, A, and M, optional SB-800, SB600, and SB-R200 Speedlights can be used at all shutter speeds. • Unlock focus area selector. • Auto-area AF selected for Custom Setting 2 (AFarea mode): choose another mode. • Press shutter-release button halfway to turn monitor off or activate exposure meters. Use AE-L/AF-L button to lock focus when AF-C autofocus mode is selected or when photographing moving subjects in AF-A mode. • Rotate focus mode selector to AF. • Camera unable to focus using autofocus: use manual focus or focus lock. : select another • Mode dial rotated to , , or mode. • AF-assist lamp does not light for continuous-servo autofocus. Set autofocus mode to AF-S. • Custom Setting 2 (AF-area mode) set to Auto-area AF or Dynamic area: select center focus area. • Choose On for Custom Setting 4 (AF assist). • Illuminator has turned off automatically. Illuminator may become hot with continued use; wait for lamp to cool down. • Memory card is full, locked, or not inserted. • Flash is charging. • Camera is not in focus. • CPU lens with aperture ring attached without locking aperture at highest f-number. • Non-CPU lens is attached: rotate camera mode dial to M. • Mode dial rotated to S after shutter speed of bulb selected in mode M: choose new shutter speed. • Replace battery in remote control. • Choose remote control mode. • Flash is charging. • Time selected for Custom Setting 30 (Remote) has passed: reselect remote control mode. • Bright light is interfering with remote. 98, 119 30 87 18 29, 94 31, 32 24 29 87 87 — 15 23 22 11, 117 50 48 123 38 23 99 — • P, S, A, and M modes: lower flash. • Digital Vari-Program modes: turn flash off. 23 40 Turn long exposure noise reduction off. Set camera clock. 83 103 Problem Solution Final photo is larger than area shown Viewfinder horizontal and vertical frame coverage is in viewfinder. approximately 95 %. • Lower ISO sensitivity or use high ISO noise reduction. Randomly-spaced bright pixels • Shutter speed is slower than 8 s: use long exposure (“noise”) appears in photographs. noise reduction. Reddish areas may appear in long time-exposures. Reddish areas appear in photos. Turn long exposure noise reduction On when shooting at shutter speeds of “bulb” or “--”. • Clean lens. Photos are blotched or smeared. • Clean low-pass filter. • Select mode P, S, A, or M and adjust white balance to match light source. Colors are unnatural. • Select mode P, S, A, or M and adjust Optimize image settings. Flashing areas appear in images. Press multi selector up or down or rotate sub-comShooting data appear on images. mand dial to choose photo information displayed. A graph appears during playback. RAW image is not played back. Photo was taken at image quality of NEF + JPEG. • Some photos are not displayed during playback. Select All for Playback folder. Note that Current will • Message displayed stating that no automatically be selected when next photo is taken. images are available for playback. • Select On for Rotate tall. • Photo was taken with Off selected for Auto image rotation. “Tall” (portrait) orientation photos • Camera orientation was changed while shutter-reare displayed in “wide” (landscape) lease button was pressed in continuous shooting orientation. mode. • Camera was pointed up or down when photo was taken. • Some retouch options can not be applied to copies. Can not retouch photo. • Photo created or modified with other device. Can not delete photo. Photo is protected: remove protection. Can not change print order. Memory card is full or locked. Photo is in RAW (NEF) format. Transfer to computer and Can not select photo for printing. print using ViewNX (supplied) or Capture NX (available separately). Can not print pictures via direct USB Set USB to MTP/PTP. connection. Photo is not displayed on TV. Choose correct video mode. Can not copy photos to computer. Choose correct USB option. Can not use Camera Control Pro 2 or • Set USB to MTP/PTP. Camera Control Pro. • Camera Control Pro: update software to latest version. — 43, 83 83 83 124 125 45, 58 45, 79 62, 63 34 75 75 108 108 108 109 110 65 15, 19 67, 123 67, 104 103 67, 104 67, 104 123 Technical Notes / Troubleshooting 131 Camera Error Messages and Displays This section lists the warning indicators and error messages that appear in the viewfinder, control panel, and monitor. Indicator Control panel Viewfinder Problem Lens aperture ring not locked at minimum aperture. • No lens attached. • Non-CPU lens attached. Low battery. • Battery is exhausted. Solution Lock ring at minimum aperture 11 (blinks) (highest f-number). • Attach lens (IX Nikkor excluded). 7, 117 (blinks) • Select mode M. 50 Ready fully-charged spare battery. 12, 123 • Recharge or replace with fully- 12, 123 charged spare battery. (blinks) (blinks) • Battery information not avail- • Battery can not be used in cam13 able. era. Camera clock not set. (blinks) No memory card. No memory for further photos at current settings, or camera has (blinks) run out of file or folder numbers. Camera unable to focus using ● (blinks) autofocus. Set camera clock. Insert memory card. • Reduce image quality or size. • Delete photographs. (blinks) • Insert new memory card. Recompose photo or focus manually. • Choose lower ISO sensitivity. • Increase shutter speed. Subject too bright; photo will be • Choose smaller aperture (larger overexposed. f-number). • Use optional Neutral Density (ND) filter. • Choose higher ISO sensitivity. Subject too dark; photo will be • Decrease shutter speed. underexposed. • Choose larger aperture (smaller f-number). • Flash required for correct expo- • Raise built-in flash. sure. (blinks) • blinks for 3 s after flash fires: • View photo; if underexposed, flash has fired at full power. adjust settings and try again. Optional Speedlight that does Change flash control mode for opnot support i-TTL set to TTL tional Speedlight. (blinks) mode. (blinks) “bulb” selected in mode M and (blinks) mode dial rotated to S. Change shutter speed or select “--” selected in mode M and mode M. (blinks) mode dial rotated to S. Press shutter-release button again. Camera malfunction. If error persists, consult with Nikon(blinks) authorized service representative. / 132 Technical Notes / Troubleshooting 103 15 33 65, 74 15 22, 32 43 48, 50 49, 50 122 43 48, 50 49, 50 23 26, 61 120, 141 48, 50 — Monitor NO CARD PRESENT CARD IS LOCKED THIS CARD CAN NOT BE USED Indicator Control panel Viewfinder / / (blinks) (blinks) CARD IS NOT FORMATTED (blinks) Format No FOLDER CONTAINS NO IMAGES ALL IMAGES HIDDEN FILE DOES NOT CONTAIN IMAGE DATA CHECK PRINTER Continue Cancel Problem No memory card. Solution Insert memory card. 15 Memory card is locked (write protected). • Error accessing memory card. Slide card write-protect 15 switch to “write” position. • Use Nikon-approved card. 122 • Card may be damaged. — Contact retailer or Nikonauthorized service representative. • Unable to create new • Delete unwanted files or in- 15, 65, folder. sert new memory card. 74 Memory card has not been Highlight Format and press formatted for use in D80. OK to format memory card. — • Memory card is empty. • Insert another card. • Current folder is empty. • Set Playback folder to All. 15 75 Set Playback folder to All All photos in current folder or use Hide image to reveal 75, 77 are hidden. photos. File created or modified using computer or other Delete file or reformat mem- 16, 65, 74, make of camera, or file is ory card. 102 corrupt. Replace ink. If error occurs Printer is out of ink or ink is with ink remaining in printer, — running low. check printer status. Technical Notes / Troubleshooting 133 Appendix The Appendix covers the following topics: • Supported Standards ................................................................................................................................................... • Available Settings and Defaults ............................................................................................................................... • Memory Card Capacity and Image Quality / Size ................................................................................................ • Exposure Program (Mode P)....................................................................................................................................... • Bracketing Programs.................................................................................................................................................... • White Balance and Color Temperature .................................................................................................................. • Flash Control ................................................................................................................................................................... • Shutter Speeds Available with the Built-in Flash .............................................................................................. • Aperture, Sensitivity, and Flash Range.................................................................................................................. 134 134 138 139 140 140 141 141 141 Supported Standards • DCF Version 2.0: The Design Rule for Camera File Systems (DCF) is a standard widely used in the digital camera industry to ensure compatibility among different makes of camera. • DPOF: Digital Print Order Format (DPOF) is an industry-wide standard that allows pictures to be printed from print orders stored on the memory card. • Exif version 2.21: The D80 supports Exif (Exchangeable Image File Format for Digital Still Cameras) version 2.21, a standard in which information stored with photographs is used for optimal color reproduction when the images are output on Exif-compliant printers. • PictBridge: A standard developed through cooperation with the digital camera and printer industries, allowing photographs to be output directly to a printer without first transferring them to a computer. Available Settings and Defaults The following table lists the settings that can be adjusted in each mode. Shooting menu Optimize image Image quality 1 ✔ Image size 1 ✔ White balance 1 ISO sensitivity 1 ✔ Long exp. NR ✔ High ISO NR ✔ Multiple exposure 1 Shooting mode 1 ✔ Autofocus mode 1 ✔2 Metering 1 Flexible program 1 Autoexposure lock 1 ✔ Exposure compensation 1 Bracketing 1 Flash mode 1 ✔2 1 Metering 1. Reset with two-button reset ( 44). 2. Reset with when mode dial is rotated to new setting. Other settings 134 Technical Notes / Appendix ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔2 ✔ ✔2 P ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔2 ✔2 ✔2 ✔2 ✔2 ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 2, 3 ✔ 2 ✔ 2, 3 ✔ 2, 3 ✔ 2 ✔ ✔ 3. Available with optional Speedlight only. 4. Reset with Custom Setting R (Reset). S ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ A ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ M ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ P S A M 1: Beep ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔2 ✔2 ✔2 ✔2 ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 2: AF-area mode ✔2 ✔2 ✔2 3: Center AF area ✔ ✔ ✔ 4: Built-in AF assist illuminator ✔ ✔ 5: No memory card? ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 6: Image review ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 7: ISO auto 8: Grid display ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 9: Viewfinder warning ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 11: Exposure comp. ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 12: Center-weighted ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 13: Auto BKT set ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 14: Auto BKT order ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 15: Command dials ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 10: EV step Custom Settings 4 16: FUNC button ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 17: Illumination ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 18: AE-L/AF-L ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 19: AE lock ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 20: Focus area ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 21: AF area illumination ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 22: Built-in flash ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 23: Flash warning ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 24: Flash shutter speed ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 25: Auto FP ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 26: Modeling flash ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 27: Monitor off ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 28: Auto meter off ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 29: Self timer ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 30: Remote ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 31: Exposure delay mode ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ 32: MB-D80batteries ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ Technical Notes / Appendix 135 The following defaults are restored when a two-button reset is performed: P — — — AUTO — — Center Other settings 136 Technical Notes / Appendix S A JPEG Normal L (3872 × 2592) Shooting menu Image quality Image size White balance Fine tuning Choose color temp. ISO sensitivity Multiple exposure Shooting mode Focus area Focus lock AE lock hold Autofocus mode Metering Flexible program Exposure compensation Bracketing Flash mode Flash compensation FV lock 1. Auto slow sync. Auto 0 5,000 K 100 Off Single frame — Off Off AF-A — — Off — Auto — — Auto — — Center Matrix — Off (0.0) — Slow 1 Off (0 frames) Fill flash Off (0.0) Off M The following defaults are restored with Custom Setting R (Reset): P Custom Settings 1: Beep 2: AF-area mode Auto-area AF 3: Center AF area 4: Built-in AF assist illuminator On — 5: No memory card? 6: Image review 7: ISO auto 8: Grid display 9: Viewfinder warning 10: EV step 11: Exposure comp. 12: Center-weighted 13: Auto BKT set 14: Auto BKT order 15: Command dials 16: FUNC button 17: Illumination 18: AE-L/AF-L 19: AE lock 20: Focus area 21: AF area illumination 22: Built-in flash 23: Flash warning 24: Flash shutter speed 25: Auto FP 26: Modeling flash 27: Monitor off 28: Auto meter off 29: Self timer 30: Remote 31: Exposure delay mode 32: MB-D80 batteries 1. Max. sensitivity set to 800, Min. shutter speed set to 1/30. On Single Dynamic Auto-area AF Normal frame On — Release locked On — Off On 1/3 step — — — — — ISO display Off AE/AF lock Off No wrap Auto — — — — — 20 s 6s 10 s 1 min. Off LR6 (AA-size alkaline) S A M Single area On Off 1 Off ø8 mm AE & flash MTR > Under > over Off TTL On 1/60 Off Off Technical Notes / Appendix 137 Memory Card Capacity and Image Quality / Size The following table shows the approximate number of pictures that can be stored on a 1 GB Panasonic Pro HIGH SPEED card at different image quality and size settings. Image quality NEF + JPEG Fine 3 NEF + JPEG Normal 3 NEF + JPEG Basic 3 NEF (RAW) JPEG Fine JPEG Normal JPEG Basic Image size L M S L M S L M S — L M S L M S L M S File size (MB) 1 17.2 15.1 13.6 14.8 13.8 13.0 13.6 13.0 12.7 12.4 4.8 2.7 1.2 2.4 1.3 0.6 1.2 0.7 0.3 Number of images 1 54 63 72 65 71 76 72 76 78 82 133 233 503 260 446 918 503 876 1500 Buffer capacity 1, 2 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 23 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 1. All figures are approximate. File size varies with scene recorded and make of memory card. 2. Maximum number of frames that can be taken before shooting stops at ISO 100. Capacity of memory buffer drops if noise reduction is on. 3. Image size applies to JPEG images only. Size of NEF (RAW) images can not be changed. File size is the total for compressed NEF (RAW) and JPEG images. 138 Technical Notes / Appendix Exposure Program (Mode P) The exposure program for mode P is shown in the following graph. F (lens focal length) ≤ 55 mm 135 mm ≥ F > 55 mm F > 135 mm Aperture Shutter speed The maximum and minimum values for EV vary with ISO sensitivity; the above graph assumes an ISO sensitivity of ISO 200 equivalent. When matrix metering is used, values over 16 / EV are reduced to 16 / EV. Technical Notes / Appendix 139 Bracketing Programs The number of shots and bracketing increment are shown in the control panel as follows: Number of frames Bracketing increment Bracketing progress indicator The Bracketing Progress Indicator and Number of Frames Number of frames Progress indicator Description 3 frames: unmodified, negative, positive * 2 frames: unmodified, negative * 2 frames: unmodified, positive * Order when Under > MTR > over is selected for Custom Setting 14 (Auto BKT order) is negative, unmodified, positive (three frames) or negative, unmodified (two frames). Bracketing Increment Autoexposure and flash bracketing Custom Setting 10 (EV Step) set to 1/3 EV Custom Setting 10 (EV Step) set to 1/2 EV Display Increment Display Increment / EV / EV / EV 1 EV 1 EV 1 / EV 1 / EV 2 EV 1 / EV 2 EV White balance bracketing Display Increment 1 2 3 White Balance and Color Temperature Approximate color temperatures for each white balance setting are given below (values may differ from color temperatures given by photo color meters): Fine tuning White balance None –3 –2 –1 +1 +2 +3 Auto 3,500 K – 8,000 K Fine tuning added to value selected by camera Incandescent 3,000 K 3,300 K 3,200 K 3,100 K 2,900 K 2,800 K 2,700 K Fluorescent* 4,200 K 7,200 K 6,500 K 5,000 K 3,700 K 3,000 K 2,700 K Dir. sunlight 5,200 K 5,600 K 5,400 K 5,300 K 5,000 K 4,900 K 4,800 K Flash 5,400 K 6,000 K 5,800 K 5,600 K 5,200 K 5,000 K 4,800 K Cloudy 6,000 K 6,600 K 6,400 K 6,200 K 5,800 K 5,600 K 5,400 K Shade 8,000 K 9,200 K 8,800 K 8,400 K 7,500 K 7,100 K 6,700 K Choose color temp. 2,500 K – 9,900 K Not available White balance preset — * Color temperature range reflects wide variation among fluorescent light sources, ranging from lowtemperature stadium lighting to high-temperature mercury-vapor lamps. 140 Technical Notes / Appendix Flash Control ( 42, 120) The following types of flash control are supported when a CPU lens is used in combination with the built-in flash or optional SB-800 or SB-600 Speedlights. • i-TTL Balanced Fill-Flash for Digital SLR: Flash output is adjusted for a natural balance between the main subject and the background. • Standard i-TTL Fill-Flash for Digital SLR: Flash output is adjusted for the main subject; the brightness of the background is not taken into account. Recommended for shots in which the main subject is emphasized at the expense of background details, or when exposure compensation is used. Standard i-TTL flash control is used with spot metering or when selected with the optional Speedlight. i-TTL balanced fill-flash for digital SLR is used in all other cases. Shutter Speeds Available with the Built-in Flash The following shutter speeds are available when the built-in flash is used. Shutter speed Mode Shutter speed /–/ s /–1 s /–/ s S, M /–30 s * Slowest shutter speed at which flash will be used can be selected using Custom Setting 24 (Flash shutter speed). Flash will still fire at shutter speeds as slow as 30 s when set to slow sync. , Mode , P *, A * Aperture, Sensitivity, and Flash Range Flash range varies with sensitivity (ISO equivalency) and aperture. 100 1.4 2 2.8 4 5.6 7 11 16 125 1.6 2.2 3.2 4.5 6.3 9 13 18 160 1.8 2.5 3.5 5 7.1 10 14 20 200 2 2.8 4 5.6 8 11 16 22 Aperture at ISO equivalent of 250 320 400 500 640 800 2.2 2.5 2.8 3.2 3.5 4 3.2 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.6 4.5 5 5.6 6.3 7.1 8 6.3 7.1 8 9 10 11 9 10 11 13 14 16 13 14 16 18 20 22 18 20 22 25 29 32 25 29 32 — — — Range 1000 4.5 6.3 9 13 18 25 — — 1200 5 7.1 10 14 20 29 — — 1600 5.6 8 11 16 22 32 — — m 1.0–9.2 0.7–6.5 0.6–4.6 0.6–3.2 0.6–2.3 0.6–1.6 0.6–1.1 0.6–0.8 ft. 3 ft. 3 in.–30 ft. 2in. 2 ft. 4 in.–21 ft. 4in. 2 ft.–15 ft. 1in. 2 ft.–10 ft. 6in. 2 ft.–7 ft. 7in. 2 ft.–5 ft. 3in. 2 ft.–3 ft. 7in. 2 ft.–2 ft. 7in. In the following modes, the maximum aperture (minimum f-number) is limited according to ISO sensitivity when the built-in flash is used: Mode P, , , 100 4 5.6 125 4.2 6 160 4.5 6.3 200 4.8 6.7 Maximum aperture at ISO sensitivity of 250 320 400 500 640 800 5 5.3 5.6 6 6.3 6.7 7.1 7.6 8 8.5 9 9.5 1000 1250 1600 7.1 7.6 8 10 11 11 For each one-step increase in sensitivity (e.g., from 200 to 400), aperture is stopped down by half an f/-stop. If the maximum aperture of the lens is smaller than given above, the maximum value for aperture will be the maximum aperture of the lens. Technical Notes / Appendix 141 Specifications Type Single-lens reflex digital camera Effective pixels 10.2 million CCD Image size (pixels) 23.6 × 15.8 mm; total pixels: 10.75 million • 3,872 × 2,592 (Large) • 2,896 × 1,944 (Medium) Lens mount Nikon F mount with AF coupling and AF contacts Compatible lenses * Type G or D Nikkor PC-Micro Nikkor 85 mm f/2.8D Other AF Nikkor † AI-P Nikkor Non-CPU • 1,936 × 1,296 (Small) All functions supported All functions supported except autofocus and some exposure modes All functions supported except 3D color matrix metering II All functions supported except 3D color matrix metering II and autofocus Can be used in mode M, but exposure meter does not function; electronic rangefinder can be used if maximum aperture is f/5.6 or faster. * IX-Nikkor lenses can not be used † Excluding lenses for F3AF Picture angle Equivalent in 35mm (135) format is approx. 1.5 times lens focal length. Viewfinder Diopter Eyepoint Focusing screen Frame coverage Magnification Optical fixed eye-level pentaprism –2.0 to +1.0 m -1 19.5 mm (–1.0 m -1) Type-B BriteView Clear Matte Screen Mark II with superimposed focus brackets and OnDemand grid lines Approx. 95% of lens (vertical and horizontal) Approx. 0.94 × (50 mm lens at infinity; –1.0 m -1 Reflex mirror Quick return Lens aperture Instant return with depth-of-field preview Depth-of-field preview When CPU lens is attached, depth-of-field preview button stops aperture down to value selected by user (A and M modes) or by camera (other modes) Self-timer Electronically controlled timer with 2, 5, 10 or 20 s duration Focus-area selection Focus area can be selected from 11 focus areas Lens servo • Autofocus (AF): Instant single-servo AF (AF-S); continuous-servo AF (AF-C); auto AFS/AF-C selection (AF-A); predictive focus tracking activated automatically according to subject status • Manual focus (M) Storage Media File system Compression Autofocus Detection range AF-area mode Focus lock ISO sensitivity (Recommended Exposure Index) SD (Secure Digital) memory cards; camera supports SDHC Compliant with Design Rule for Camera File System (DCF) 2.0 and Digital Print Order Format (DPOF) • NEF (RAW): compressed 12-bit • JPEG: JPEG baseline-complaint TTL phase detection by Nikon Multi-CAM 1000 autofocus sensor module –1.0 to +19 EV (ISO 100 at 20 °C/68 °F) Single-area AF, dynamic-area AF, auto-area AF Focus can be locked by pressing the shutter-release button halfway (single-servo AF) or by pressing the AE-L/AF-L button 100 to 1600 with additional settings of up to 1 EV over 1600 in steps of / EV 142 Technical Notes / Specifications Exposure Metering Matrix Three-mode through-the-lens (TTL) exposure metering 3D color matrix metering II (type G and D lenses); color matrix metering II (other CPU lenses); metering performed by 420-segment RGB sensor Center-weighted Weight of 75% given to 6, 8, or 10 mm circle in center of frame Spot Meters 3.5 mm circle (about 2.5% of frame) centered on active focus area Range (ISO 100 equivalent, 0 to 20 EV (3D color matrix or center-weighted metering) f/1.4 lens, 20 °C/68 °F) 2 to 20 EV (spot metering) Exposure meter coupling CPU coupling Mode Digital Vari-Program ( auto, portrait, landscape, macro close-up, sports, night landscape, nigh portrait); programmed auto (P) with flexible program; shutterpriority auto (S); aperture-priority auto (A); manual (M) Exposure compensation –5 to +5 EV in increments of / or ⁄ EV Bracketing Exposure and / or flash bracketing (2–3 exposures in increments of ⁄ or ⁄ EV) Exposure lock Exposure locked at detected value with AE-L/AF-L button Shutter Speed Electronically-controlled vertical-travel focal plane shutter 30 to ⁄ s in steps of ⁄ or ⁄ EV, bulb White balance Auto (TTL white balance with 420-segment RGB sensor); six manual modes with fine tuning; color temperature setting; preset white balance 2 to 3 exposures in increments of 1 Bracketing Built-in flash Guide number (m/ft) Flash Sync contact Flash control TTL Auto aperture Non-TTL auto Range-priority manual Flash mode Flash-ready indicator Accessory shoe Nikon Creative Lighting System • , , , : Auto flash with auto pop-up • P, S, A, M: Manual pop-up with button release Approx. 13/42 at ISO 100 and 20 °C (68 °F) X-contact only; flash synchronization at shutter speeds of up to ⁄ s TTL flash control by 420-segment RGB sensor. i-TTL balanced fill-flash for digital SLR and standard i-TTL fill-flash for digital SLR available with built-in flash, SB-800, and SB600. Available with SB-800 and CPU lens Available with such Speedlights as SB-800, 80DX, 28DX, 28, 27, and 22s Available with SB-800 • , , : Auto, auto with red-eye reduction; fill-flash and red-eye reduction available with optional Speedlight • : Auto, auto slow sync, auto slow sync with red-eye reduction; slow sync and slow sync with red-eye reduction available with optional Speedlight • , , : Fill-flash and red-eye reduction available with optional Speedlight • P, A: Fill flash, rear-curtain with slow sync, slow sync, slow sync with red-eye reduction, red-eye reduction • S, M: Fill flash, rear-curtain sync, red-eye reduction Lights when built-in flash or SB-series Speedlight such as 800, 600, 80DX, 28DX, 50DX, 28, 27, or 22s is fully charged; blinks for about 3 s after flash is fired at full output Standard ISO hot-shoe contact with safety lock With SB-800, 600, and R200, supports Advanced Wireless Lighting (SB-600 and R200 only support AWL when used as remote flash), Auto FP High-Speed Sync, Flash Color Information Communication, modeling Flash, and FV Lock. Monitor 2.5 in., 230,000-dot, low-temperature polysilicon TFT LCD with brightness adjustment Video output Can be selected from NTSC and PAL External interface USB 2.0 Hi-speed Tripod socket ⁄ in. (ISO) Technical Notes / Specifications 143 Firmware upgrades Firmware can be upgraded by user Supported languages Chinese (Simplified and Traditional), Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swedish Power source • One rechargeable Nikon EN-EL3e Li-ion battery; charging voltage (MH-18a quick charger): 7.4 V DC • MB-D80 Multi-Power battery pack (available separately) with one or two rechargeable Nikon EN-EL3e Li-ion batteries or six LR6 alkaline, HR6 Ni-MH, FR6 lithium, or ZR6 nickel manganese AA batteries • EH-5/EH-5a AC adapter (available separately) Dimensions (W × D × H) Approx. 132 × 103 × 77 mm (5.2 × 4.1 × 3.0 in.) Weight Approx. 585 g (1 lb. 5 oz.) without battery, memory card, body cap, or LCD monitor cover Operating environment Temperature Humidity 0 to +40 °C (+32 to 104 °F) Less than 85% (no condensation) Unless otherwise stated, all figures are for a camera with a fully-charged battery operating at an ambient temperature of 20 °C (68 °F). MH-18a Quick Charger Rated input AC 100 to 240 V, 50/60 Hz Rated output DC 8.4 V / 900 mA Supported batteries EN-EL3e rechargeable Li-ion batteries Charging time Approx. 135 minutes Operating temperature 0 to +40 °C (+32 to 104 °F) Dimensions (W × D × H) Approx. 90 × 35 × 58 mm (3.5 × 1.4 × 2.3 in.) Length of cord Approx. 1,800 mm (5 ft. 11 in.) Weight Approx. 80 g (2.8 oz.), excluding power cable EN-EL3e Rechargeable Li-ion Battery Type Rechargeable lithium-ion battery Rated capacity 7.4 V / 1500 mAh Dimensions (W × D × H) Approx. 39.5 × 56 × 21 mm (1.6 × 2.2 × 0.8 in.) Weight Approx. 80 g (2.8 oz.), excluding power cable Specifications Nikon reserves the right to change the specifications of the hardware and software described in this manual at any time and without prior notice. Nikon will not be held liable for damages that may result from any mistakes that this manual may contain. 144 Technical Notes / Specifications 18–135 mm f/3.5–5.6G ED AF-S DX Zoom-Nikkor Lens (Available Separately) Type G-type AF-S DX Zoom-Nikkor lens with built-in CPU and Nikon mount Supported cameras Nikon DX format digital cameras Focal length 18 – 135 mm Max. aperture 1 : 3.5 – 5.6 Construction 15 elements in 13 groups (including 1 ED glass element and 2 aspherical elements) Focal length scale 18, 24, 35, 50, 70, 105, 135 Distance information Supplied to camera body Zoom Zoom adjusted by rotating zoom ring Focus Autofocus with Silent Wave Motor; manual focus; manual focus supported when A-M switch set to A or M. Focus can be adjusted by rotating lens focusing ring after locking focus in single-servo autofocus. Do not use focusing ring while camera is focusing. Closest focus distance 0.45 m (1.5 ft.) at all zoom positions Aperture Seven blade diaphragm with auto aperture Aperture range f/3.5 – 22 (at 18 mm); f/5.6 – 38 (at 135 mm) Metering Maximum aperture Filter diameter 67 mm (P=0.75 mm) Dimensions (W × D × H) Approx. 73.5 mm diameter × 86.5 mm/2.9 × 3.4 in. Weight Approx. 385 g (13.6 oz.) Lens hood HB-32 (available separately; attaches as shown below) The following accessories can not be used with the 18–135 mm f/3.5–5.6G ED AF-S DX: teleconverters (all types), PK auto extension rings (all types), K rings (all types), BR-4 auto rings, bellows attachments (all types), and SX-1 attachment rings. Other accessories may also be incompatible. See the accessory manual for details. Technical Notes / Specifications 145 Battery Life The number of shots that can be taken with a fully-charged EN-EL3e battery (1500 mAh) varies with the condition of the battery, temperature, and how the camera is used. The following measurements were performed at a temperature of 20 °C (68 °F). Example 1: 2,700 shots AF-S DX 18–135 mm f/3.5–5.6G ED lens; continuous shooting mode; continuous-servo autofocus; image quality set to JPEG Basic; image size set to M; shutter speed ⁄ s; shutter-release button pressed halfway for three seconds and focus cycled from infinity to minimum range three times; after six shots, monitor turned on for five seconds and then turned off ; cycle repeated once exposure meters have turned off. Example 2: 600 shots AF-S DX 18–135 mm f/3.5–5.6G ED lens; single-frame shooting mode; continuous-servo autofocus; image quality set to JPEG Normal; image size set to L; shutter speed 1⁄250 s; shutter-release button pressed halfway for five seconds and focus cycled from infinity to minimum range once; monitor turned on for four seconds after each shot; built-in Speedlight fired at full power with every other shot; next shot taken after exposure meters have turned off. The following can reduce battery life: • Using the monitor • Keeping the shutter-release button pressed halfway • Repeated autofocus operations • Taking RAW (NEF) photographs • Slow shutter speeds To ensure maximum battery performance: • Keep the battery contacts clean. Soiled contacts can reduce battery performance. • Use EN-EL3e batteries immediately after charging. Batteries will lose their charge if left unused. • Check battery status regularly using the Battery info option in the setup menu ( 107). The battery level displayed by the camera may vary with changes in temperature. 146 Technical Notes / Specifications Index Symbols 3D color matrix metering II. See Metering 420-segment RGB sensor. See Metering; White balance (auto mode), 19–23 (close-up mode), 24–25 (continuous shooting indicator), 36 (exposure compensation), 54 (flash compensation), 55 (flash-ready indicator), 23 (FV lock), 92–93 (landscape mode), 24–25 (night landscape mode), 24–25 (night portrait mode), 24–25 (portrait mode), 24–25 (remote control indicator), 38–39 (self timer indicator), 37 (sports mode), 24–25 A A. See Aperture-priority auto Accessories. See also Battery; Lens; Flash, optional optional, 116–123 supplied, 7 Adobe RGB. See Color mode Advanced Wireless Lighting, 120 AE-L/AF-L (Custom Settings menu), 94 AE lock (Custom Settings menu), 94 AF-A. See Focus, autofocus, mode AF area illumination (Custom Settings menu), 95 AF-area mode (Custom Settings menu), 87 AF-assist illuminator, 28, 87 AF-C. See Focus, autofocus, mode AF-S. See Focus, autofocus, mode Aperture, 49–50, 141 maximum, 49, 50, 116, 121 minimum, 45, 49, 50, 132 Aperture-priority auto, 49 Audio/video (AV) cable, 66 Auto-area AF. See AF-area mode Auto BKT order (Custom Settings menu), 91 Auto BKT set (Custom Settings menu), 90 Autoexposure lock, 53. See also AE lock Autofocus. See Focus Auto (Flash mode), 41 Auto FP (Custom Settings menu), 98 Auto image rotation (setup menu), 108 Auto meter off, 18, 99 Auto meter off (Custom Settings menu), 99 Auto mode, 19–23 B Backlight, control panel, 3, 93 BASIC. See Image quality Battery, 7, 12–13, 19, 123, 127. See also Battery info; Clock, battery; MB-D80 EN-EL3e, 7, 12–13, 123 inserting, 12–13 life, 146 storage, ii, 127 Battery info (setup menu), 107 Beep (Custom Settings menu), 86 (bracketing indicator), 56–57 Black and white, 81 Blur, reducing, 36, 51. See also Exposure delay mode; Self timer; Shooting mode, delayed remote; Shooting mode, quick-response remote Bracketing, 56–57, 140. See also Exposure, bracketing; Flash, bracketing; White balance, bracketing Brightness. See Exposure; Flash, level; LCD brightness; Monitor, brightness of Buffer size, 36 Built-in AF-assist illuminator (Custom Settings menu), 87 Built-in flash (Custom Settings menu), 40, 95 Bulb. See Long time-exposures Burst. See Shooting mode, continuous B/W. See Black and white C Camera Control Pro, 68, 123 Capture NX, 106, 123 Center AF area (Custom Settings menu), 87 Center-weighted. See Center-weighted; Metering Center-weighted (Custom Settings menu), 90 Clock, 103, 132 battery, 103 (“clock not set” indicator), 103, 132 Close up, 24–25 CLS. See Creative Lighting System Color. See Color mode; Filter effects; Hue; Saturation; White balance Color mode, 80 Color profile. See Color mode Color space. See Color mode Color temperature, 58, 59, 140. See also White balance Command dials (Custom Settings menu), 91 Computer, 67–68, 69 Continuous, 36 Continuous-servo AF. See Focus, autofocus, mode Contrast, 79–80. See also Optimize image; Tone compensation Copies. See Small picture CPU lens. See Lens, CPU Creative Lighting System (CLS), 119, 121 Crop, 71, 111. See also Printing; Trim CSM/Setup menu (setup menu), 101–102 Custom Settings, 86–100 D Date, 14, 103. See also Clock; World time Daylight saving time, 103. See also World time DCF. See Design Rule for Camera File System DC-IN, 9 Default settings, 134–137. See also Reset; Two-button reset Delete, 26, 65, 74. See also Memory card, formatting; Protecting photographs all images, 74 selected images, 74 single-frame playback, 26, 65 Delayed remote, 36, 38 Delete (playback menu), 74 Depth of field, 49 preview, 49. See also Modeling flash Design Rule for Camera File System, 134 Digital Print Order Format, 69, 73, 134 Digital Vari-Program, 24–25 Diopter, 17, 122. See also Viewfinder D-lighting, 110 D-lighting (retouch menu), 110 DPOF See Digital Print Order Format Dust off ref photo (setup menu), 106–107 Dynamic area AF. See AFarea mode E Electronic rangefinder. See Focus, manual EV step (Custom Settings menu), 89 Exif version 2.21, 134 Exposure, 52–57, 89. See also Aperture; Aperture-priority auto; Autoexposure lock; Programmed auto; Shutterpriority auto; Shutter speed; Manual mode bracketing, 56–57, 140 compensation, 54, 55, 89 electronic analog exposure display, 50 meters, 3, 18, 99 program, 139 Exposure comp. (Custom Settings menu), 89 Exposure delay mode (Custom Settings menu), 99 Eyepiece cap, 3, 8, 37 F File, 33, 35, 77, 106, 138 format, 35, 77, 134 File no. sequence (setup menu), 106 Filter. See also Accessories, optional; Filter effects; Neutral Density (ND) Filter effects (retouch menu), 112 Firmware. See Firmware version Technical Notes / Index 147 Firmware version (setup menu), 108 FINE. See Image quality Flash bracketing, 56–57 built in, 23, 40–42, 95 compensation, 55 level, 42, 90, 92 monitor preflash, 93, 95–97 optional, 119–121 range, 23, 119, 141 ready indicator, 23, 93, 121 remote, 119 sync speed, 42 Flash mode, 40–42 Flash shutter speed (Custom Settings menu), 98 Flash warning (Custom Settings menu), 98 Flexible program. See Programmed auto Focus, 28–32. See also AFarea mode area, 30, 32, 87 center, 30, 87 autofocus, 28–31 lock, 31 mode, 29–30 manual, 32 tracking, 24 Focus area (Custom Settings menu), 94 Folder, 75, 102 playback, 75 recording, 105 Folders (setup menu), 105 Format (setup menu), 102 Framing grid, 6. See also Grid display Front-curtain sync, 42 FUNC button (Custom Settings menu), 92–93 FV lock, 92–93 G Grid display (Custom Settings menu), 89 H Hide image (playback menu), 78 Hiding images. See Hide image High ISO NR (shooting menu), 83 Highlights, 63 Histogram, 63 Hue, 80 I Illumination (Custom Settings menu), 93 148 Technical Notes / Index Illuminator. See Backlight, control panel; AF-assist illuminator Image comment (setup menu), 104 Image overlay (retouch menu), 114–115 Image quality, 34 NEF (RAW), 34, 35, 69, 114–115 Image quality (shooting menu), 81 Image review (Custom Settings menu), 88 Image sensor, 34, 46, 106, 125 dimensions of, 142 Image size, 35 Image size (shooting menu), 81 ISO auto (Custom Settings menu), 88 ISO sensitivity, 43 auto, 43, 88 ISO sensitivity (shooting menu), 83 i-TTL flash control, 96, 119–121, 141 J JPEG, 33, 35, 69, 138 K K. See Color temperature; Number of exposures remaining L L. See Image size Landscapes. See (landscape mode); (night landscape mode) Language, 14, 103 Language (setup menu), 103 LCD brightness (setup menu), 103 Lens, 11, 21, 116–117 CPU, 117 type D, 117 type G, 117 non-CPU, 118 Lighting. See Flash; White balance Long exp. NR (shooting menu), 83 Long time-exposures, 51, 123 Low-pass filter, 125–126 cleaning, 125–126 M M. See Image size M. See Manual mode Manual mode, 45, 50–51 MB-D80, 100, 107, 123 MB-D80 batteries (Custom Settings menu), 100 Mass storage. See USB, Mass storage Matrix. See Metering Memory buffer, 36, 83, 138 Memory card, 15–16, 122, 138 approved, 122 capacity, 138 formatting, 16, 102 lock, 15 Menus, 74–114. See also CSM/Setup menu using, 9–10 Metering, 52 Mirror, 16, 106, 124, 125–126 Mirror lock-up (setup menu), 106 Mode, 45–51. See also Aperture-priority auto; Auto mode; Digital Vari-Program; Programmed auto; Manual mode; Shutter-priority auto Modeling flash (Custom Settings menu), 98 Monitor, 8, 9, 61, 124 auto off, 98 brightness of, 103 cover, 8 Monitor off (Custom Settings menu), 98 Monochrome, 112. See also Black and white Monochrome (retouch menu), 112 Moving subjects. See (sports mode); Focus, autofocus, mode MTP/PTP. See USB, MTP/PTP Multiple exposure, 84–85 Multiple exposure (shooting menu), 84–85 N ND. See Filter, Neutral Density (ND) NEF (RAW). See Image quality, NEF (RAW) Neutral Density. See Filter, Neutral Density (ND) Night photography. See (night landscape mode); (night portrait mode) Nikon Transfer, 67–68 Noise, 43, 51, 83, 88. See also High ISO NR; Long exp. NR No memory card? (Custom Settings menu), 88 Non-CPU lens. See Lens, non-CPU NORMAL. See Image quality NTSC. See Video mode Number of exposures remaining, 5, 16, 19, 91 O Off (Flash mode), 41 Optimize image (shooting menu), 79–81 Options. See Accessories, optional P P. See Programmed auto PictBridge, 69, 71–73, 78, 134 Pictmotion, 75–77 Picture Transfer Protocol. See USB, MTP/PTP (flexible program indicator), 47 Playback, 26, 61–73, 74–78 full frame, 26, 61 menu, 74–78 thumbnail, 63 zoom, 64 Playback folder (playback menu), 75 Portraits. See (portrait (night portrait mode); mode); Optimize image PRE. See White balance, preset Printing, 69–73. See also PictBridge; Print set Print set (playback menu), 78 Programmed auto, 47 Protecting photographs, 65 Q Quality. See Image quality Quick-response remote, 36, 38 R RAW. See Image quality, NEF (RAW) Rear-curtain sync, 41 Red eye correction (retouch menu), 111 Red-eye reduction, 41 Remote. See Accessories, optional; Shooting mode, delayed remote; Shooting mode, quick-response remote Remote cord, 123 Remote (Custom Settings menu), 99 Reset. See Default settings; Reset; Two-button reset Reset (Custom Settings menu), 86 Retouch menu, 109–115 Rotate tall (playback menu), 75 Rotating photographs, 75, 108 S S. See Image size S. See Shutter-priority auto (single-frame shooting indicator), 36 Saturation, 80 SD. See Memory card Secure Digital. See Memory card Self timer, 36, 99 Self timer (Custom Settings menu), 99 Self-portraits. See Self timer Sensitivity. See ISO sensitivity Sepia. See Monochrome Setup menu, 101–108 Sharpening, 80 Shooting menu, 79–85 Shooting mode, 36–39 continuous, 36 delayed remote, 38 quick-response remote, 38 self timer, 37 single frame, 36 Shutter, 22, 48 speed, 48, 50–51. See also Exposure Shutter-priority auto, 48 Single area AF. See AF-area mode Single frame, 36 Single-servo autofocus. See Focus, autofocus, mode Size. See Image size Slide show. See Slide show Slide show (playback menu), 75–77 Slow sync, 41 Small picture (retouch menu), 112–113 Software Suite, 67 Speedlight. See Flash Spot. See Metering sRGB. See Color mode T Television, 66 Time, 14, 103. See also Clock; World time Time exposure. See Long time exposures Thumbnail. See Playback, thumbnail TTL. See Built-in flash Tone compensation, 80 Trim (retouch menu), 111 Two-button reset, 44 U USB, 67–68, 70, 104 cable, 67, 70 Mass storage, 67–68, 70, 104 MTP/PTP, 67–68, 70, 104 USB (setup menu), 104 V Video device, 66 Video mode (setup menu), 103 VIDEO OUT, 66 Viewfinder, 6, 8, 17, 22, 89, 122. See also Viewfinder warning accessories, 122 focus, 17 indicators, 6 Viewfinder warning (Custom Settings menu), 89 Viewing photographs. See Playback ViewNX, 34, 69, 108 W (white balance indicator), 58–60 White balance, 58–60, 82. See also Color temperature bracketing, 90 preset, 59–60, 82 White balance (shooting menu), 82 World time (setup menu), 103 Technical Notes / Index 149 %52 %N .OREPRODUCTIONINANYFORMOFTHISMANUALINWHOLEORINPARTEXCEPTFOR BRIEFQUOTATIONINCRITICALARTICLESORREVIEWSMAYBEMADEWITHOUTWRITTEN AUTHORIZATIONFROM.)+/.#/20/2!4)/. 4HE.IKON'UIDETO$IGITAL0HOTOGRAPHY WITHTHE $)')4!,#!-%2! %N 0RINTEDIN%UROPE 3", -"!
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