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A poll about Auto ISO action with hot shoe TTL flash
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<blockquote data-quote="voxmagna" data-source="post: 562982" data-attributes="member: 38477"><p>The camera is a D750 which puts it in the later model range. Yes, as I said it does follow the X4 ASA rule. My trap seems to be I use autoISO enabled for outdoors and change it with the command wheel, which I find useful in A priority. But when I move to much darker indoors the ISO setting may not be what I expect and I have to be really careful to check what it is doing and force it down to 400, unless I really need a much higher ISO setting. If I have previously set the low ISO limit to 100, switch the camera on in autoISO without changing ISO, then turn on the flash for a dark room shot, it does stay set at 400 which is o.k. It's almost as if the camera grabs the exposure for non-flash on a half shutter press setting a high ISO, then says, 'this is my low threshold' so I will X4 on that.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="voxmagna, post: 562982, member: 38477"] The camera is a D750 which puts it in the later model range. Yes, as I said it does follow the X4 ASA rule. My trap seems to be I use autoISO enabled for outdoors and change it with the command wheel, which I find useful in A priority. But when I move to much darker indoors the ISO setting may not be what I expect and I have to be really careful to check what it is doing and force it down to 400, unless I really need a much higher ISO setting. If I have previously set the low ISO limit to 100, switch the camera on in autoISO without changing ISO, then turn on the flash for a dark room shot, it does stay set at 400 which is o.k. It's almost as if the camera grabs the exposure for non-flash on a half shutter press setting a high ISO, then says, 'this is my low threshold' so I will X4 on that. [/QUOTE]
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A poll about Auto ISO action with hot shoe TTL flash
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