xMachiavelli
Senior Member
Greetings,
Scanned the forum and I didn't find another topic like this.
I recently received my D500. In the past week, I've discovered that my top display on the D500 does not turn off when the camera is switched to "off." Aperture, shutter, ISO, etc is still shown on the display. The camera even reacts to me pressing the shutter release as shown in the images below - however, the camera does not capture an image when in the "OFF" position. The only fix I've found it removing the battery, but once the camera turns on and off again, the issue is back.
Has anyone seen this issue before? It has gone away twice now for a few days, then returns.
I purchased this camera refurbished from Nikon directly. Roughly 1600 actuations as of today. Since I've owned it, it's been cared for well.
I feel like this display issue is causing a battery drain, both of my Nikon batteries do not last long at all..
First image shows camera in "ON" position
Second image shows camera in "OFF" position
Third image shows camera in "OFF" position with my finger on the actuation. Does not actuate, just changes display.
Scanned the forum and I didn't find another topic like this.
I recently received my D500. In the past week, I've discovered that my top display on the D500 does not turn off when the camera is switched to "off." Aperture, shutter, ISO, etc is still shown on the display. The camera even reacts to me pressing the shutter release as shown in the images below - however, the camera does not capture an image when in the "OFF" position. The only fix I've found it removing the battery, but once the camera turns on and off again, the issue is back.
Has anyone seen this issue before? It has gone away twice now for a few days, then returns.
I purchased this camera refurbished from Nikon directly. Roughly 1600 actuations as of today. Since I've owned it, it's been cared for well.
I feel like this display issue is causing a battery drain, both of my Nikon batteries do not last long at all..
First image shows camera in "ON" position
Second image shows camera in "OFF" position
Third image shows camera in "OFF" position with my finger on the actuation. Does not actuate, just changes display.