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Photography Q&A
Metering with a remote trigger (D500)
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<blockquote data-quote="hark" data-source="post: 736334" data-attributes="member: 13196"><p>I didn't notice these were taken with your Sigma lens. Have you tried changing the lens to a Nikon one to be sure the lens and body are communicating properly?</p><p></p><p>Back when I purchased a Nikon lens from Keh, I had problems with images not being exposed properly. Some were fine while others in sequence were over exposed. In that case, I think the aperture blades were sticking and not stopping down all the way - yet the EXIF remained the same. But in this case, I'm not sure if the lens might produce underexposed images if something is wrong or not communicating correctly. </p><p></p><p>Maybe remove the lens and push the aperture lever on the rear to see if the blades are functioning normally?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="hark, post: 736334, member: 13196"] I didn't notice these were taken with your Sigma lens. Have you tried changing the lens to a Nikon one to be sure the lens and body are communicating properly? Back when I purchased a Nikon lens from Keh, I had problems with images not being exposed properly. Some were fine while others in sequence were over exposed. In that case, I think the aperture blades were sticking and not stopping down all the way - yet the EXIF remained the same. But in this case, I'm not sure if the lens might produce underexposed images if something is wrong or not communicating correctly. Maybe remove the lens and push the aperture lever on the rear to see if the blades are functioning normally? [/QUOTE]
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Photography Q&A
Metering with a remote trigger (D500)
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