Sky Blue Snapper
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 27
- Name
- David
- Edit My Images
- No
I hate my D7000 - or do I just hate my inability to know what I am doing wrong with it?
My first problem was with the auto focus - I tend to photograph a lot of parties. Some relatively low light, but certainly not dark. Using single point focus, it would be OK at first, but as time goes on the camera would just start hunting for focus and I would stand there like a muppet looking stupid, with people stood in front on me trying to hold a cheesy grin, whilst the focus refuses to lock. Eventually this was so bad, that I ended up returning the camera. However having now tried the replacement it is no better! In the end I had to give up and use my old D90 - which focused no problem in the same light. Incidentally, this is with using a SB600.
Can I really be so unlucky as to have had two duff cameras or am I doing something wrong?
My second problem is the ISO. I set my D90 on auto ISO, and just worried about shutter speed / aperture. Try doing that with the D7000 and I get terrible results. Even with the SB600 it seems to default to a very high ISO and therefore I get very ugly noisy pictures. I have read that this is a design issue with the D7000. If so how do I get round it? I have a school prom to photograph this week and I'm feeling less then confident that I will be able to pull it off! If I ignore the auto ISO, what would be a good setting for such an event - I know I sound amateurish, but ISO was something I didn’t have to worry about with my D90.
Finally, I had issues with over exposure - again using the SB600. I was trying to backfill some pictures in bright sunshine, using Aperture priority, but the camera would not increase the shutter speed greater than 250? Making my pictures over exposed.
I’m guessing that all three problems are just down the settings I'm using and me being an incompetent fool! But if anyone can help it would be appreciated, because regardless of the above, when the D7000 does take decent pictures they are great. Given the choice, I would much rather master the D7000 than go back to the D90.
My first problem was with the auto focus - I tend to photograph a lot of parties. Some relatively low light, but certainly not dark. Using single point focus, it would be OK at first, but as time goes on the camera would just start hunting for focus and I would stand there like a muppet looking stupid, with people stood in front on me trying to hold a cheesy grin, whilst the focus refuses to lock. Eventually this was so bad, that I ended up returning the camera. However having now tried the replacement it is no better! In the end I had to give up and use my old D90 - which focused no problem in the same light. Incidentally, this is with using a SB600.
Can I really be so unlucky as to have had two duff cameras or am I doing something wrong?
My second problem is the ISO. I set my D90 on auto ISO, and just worried about shutter speed / aperture. Try doing that with the D7000 and I get terrible results. Even with the SB600 it seems to default to a very high ISO and therefore I get very ugly noisy pictures. I have read that this is a design issue with the D7000. If so how do I get round it? I have a school prom to photograph this week and I'm feeling less then confident that I will be able to pull it off! If I ignore the auto ISO, what would be a good setting for such an event - I know I sound amateurish, but ISO was something I didn’t have to worry about with my D90.
Finally, I had issues with over exposure - again using the SB600. I was trying to backfill some pictures in bright sunshine, using Aperture priority, but the camera would not increase the shutter speed greater than 250? Making my pictures over exposed.
I’m guessing that all three problems are just down the settings I'm using and me being an incompetent fool! But if anyone can help it would be appreciated, because regardless of the above, when the D7000 does take decent pictures they are great. Given the choice, I would much rather master the D7000 than go back to the D90.
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