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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D600/D610
Strange Buffer Clearing Issue Last Night
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<blockquote data-quote="BackdoorArts" data-source="post: 350019" data-attributes="member: 9240"><p>After an exhausting day at work I was happy to grab my D610 and head out to see a free concert with Coco Montoya in Bethlehem last night. I brought the D610 (w/grip) and 70-200mm f/4, and stuck the EyeFi card in there to possibly upload jpegs to Facebook during the evening.</p><p></p><p>After originally shooting a few JPEG's I decided I didn't want to be bothered, so I switched the camera back to RAW only, but I didn't change the Card 2 function back to overflow. As I was shooting from the front of the stage I noticed that the camera had stopped firing, and when I looked at the buffer counter in the viewfinder I was seeing '[r00]' or '[r01]' and it wasn't increasing very quickly. I went back to my seat on the lawn to try and figure it out, and watched the little green light on the back of the camera stay lit for a <em>long</em> time. When it stopped writing (about a minute later) I turned the camera off and back on. I then went into the menus and changed the Card 2 function to overflow. I don't know which of those two things fixed my problem, but it worked fine the rest of the night. Before anyone asks, the card in slot 1 was a Sandisk Extreme Pro w/ 92Mbps write speeds, and both cards were formatted in-camera at the beginning of the night. </p><p></p><p>One other odd thing that happened was that after the "reboot" the AE/AF button on my grip (a Nikon, not 3d party, and I was using 2 Nikon batteries) changed from <strong>AF only</strong> back to the default setting. Grip seems to have been fully tightened or I would think that perhaps there was a communications glitch with it.</p><p></p><p>Weird, and slightly disconcerting glitch. Gonna keep an eye out to see if it happens again.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BackdoorArts, post: 350019, member: 9240"] After an exhausting day at work I was happy to grab my D610 and head out to see a free concert with Coco Montoya in Bethlehem last night. I brought the D610 (w/grip) and 70-200mm f/4, and stuck the EyeFi card in there to possibly upload jpegs to Facebook during the evening. After originally shooting a few JPEG's I decided I didn't want to be bothered, so I switched the camera back to RAW only, but I didn't change the Card 2 function back to overflow. As I was shooting from the front of the stage I noticed that the camera had stopped firing, and when I looked at the buffer counter in the viewfinder I was seeing '[r00]' or '[r01]' and it wasn't increasing very quickly. I went back to my seat on the lawn to try and figure it out, and watched the little green light on the back of the camera stay lit for a [I]long[/I] time. When it stopped writing (about a minute later) I turned the camera off and back on. I then went into the menus and changed the Card 2 function to overflow. I don't know which of those two things fixed my problem, but it worked fine the rest of the night. Before anyone asks, the card in slot 1 was a Sandisk Extreme Pro w/ 92Mbps write speeds, and both cards were formatted in-camera at the beginning of the night. One other odd thing that happened was that after the "reboot" the AE/AF button on my grip (a Nikon, not 3d party, and I was using 2 Nikon batteries) changed from [B]AF only[/B] back to the default setting. Grip seems to have been fully tightened or I would think that perhaps there was a communications glitch with it. Weird, and slightly disconcerting glitch. Gonna keep an eye out to see if it happens again. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D600/D610
Strange Buffer Clearing Issue Last Night
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