Friday, July 29, 2011

Troubleshoot A Nikon Camera







Nikon, established in 1917, is a world leader in camera and lens manufacturing.








Nikon, established in 1917, is a world leader in camera and lens manufacturing. Nikon also manufactures microscopes and other optical products. Optical and precision technologies are at its product core. If your Nikon camera fails to function as expected, you should run through some troubleshooting steps before taking the camera in for repair or replacing it. Many problems can be easily rectified.


Instructions


1. Check to ensure that the camera is switched on if the monitor is blank. Make sure the battery is correctly inserted in the battery chamber and try charging it for a while--it might be exhausted. Press the shutter release button halfway to wake the camera up--it might have reverted to standby.


2. Make sure the subject is in the focus area when the shutter button is pressed half-way if the pictures are out of focus. Sometimes the camera will simply be unable to focus--the green AF lamp flashes in that case.


3. Make sure you don't shake the camera if the pictures are blurry. Reduce shake by using the flash. Select the flash mode, or try using the self-timer with a tripod.


4. Reduce the exposure compensation if the pictures are too bright. Increase the exposure compensation if the images are too dark. The flash has a maximum range, so if the images are too dark despite the flash triggering, move closer to the subject.


5. Check the camera isn't in playback mode if the camera doesn't take a picture when the shutter-release button is pressed. The flash can take a while to charge. The red lightening bolt icon will illuminate and flash when the flash is charging.


6. Move to a darker location if you can't see the monitor properly. Ambient light can wash the monitor out.

Tags: Make sure, 1917 world, 1917 world leader, button pressed, camera lens, camera lens manufacturing