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Nikon D700 User's Guide:
Custom Setting Menu: Controls

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Nikon D700

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August 2008    Top of D700 Users Guide    D700 Review    More Nikon Reviews

 

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f1 - f12: Controls

How to Get Here

Press MENU, go to the left and select up and down to the pencil icon. You'll then see CUSTOM SETTING MENU on the color LCD. Click down to f CONTROLS and click to the right.

What it Does

Here lie some of the most important tricks I use on my D700. These change what some of the buttons and knobs do.

What I Change

I change a lot of these. Read on.


f1 Light Bulb Switch       top

This is new and innovative on the D700. This lets us fire up the big rear LCD to show us all our settings whenever we flick the power switch to the backlight position.

I chose the new option of BOTH.

The default of LCD backlight means the backlight (light bulb) switch lights the top LCD's backlight. Big deal; Nikons have done this the 1990s.

The new option also lights up everything on the glorious 3D rear LCD where I can see it, and shows far more information than the dorky top LCD, which is just a vestige from 1990s film cameras.

This works in concert with the INFO button.


f2 Multi Selector Center Button       top

This is a cool one. People see this on a workshop, and think that it's just made the whole workshop worthwhile, just for this trick.

This lets you select what happens when you press the center of the rear thumb selector.

You may select different things for shooting and for playback.

In shooting I prefer to have mine select the center AF area.

In playback there is a very clever trick I suggest everyone set:

Trick: under playback mode, select ZOOM ON/OFF. Now pressing the center of the selector zooms in. I choose MEDIUM.

Trick of tricks: Once you set this and use it, the rear dial flips through all the shots at the same position and magnification! I do this all the time.

It's great for selecting which shot is sharp or not. Sadly once you use the Delete key the D700 reverts to non-zoomed mode, so you'll have to zoom and scroll back to the same spot to continue in-camera editing.


f3 Multi-Selector       top

You can set the rear thumb selector to turn on the meter or the AF system.

I never use this.


f4 Photo Info/Playback       top

This lets you choose which directions do what on the rear thumb when playing back.

You can select this switch to match Canon or Nikon's convention.

In other words, it's your choice of tapping left and right or up and down to go forwards and back or to see the data about an image.


f5 Assign FUNC. button       top

This selects what the magic Function Button does. These settings are so helpful I wish I had several FUNC buttons, or the ability to assign these to other buttons I don't use.

I set it to get me to the top item in My Menu, which I set to Picture Controls. Now one tap of the FUNC button lets me select wild colors for photos of things, or lower it for photos of people from shot to shot. (you also can get to Picture Controls via the INFO button.)

Trick: It's cool enough to be able to get to Picture Controls with one tap, but the secret is now that you're there, one click left on the Big Thumb Button just got you into the menu system, from which you now can adjust anything, and I mean anything, with one hand.

You only get one choice at a time. The D200 let you do two things at once, but not on the D3, D700 or D300.

Here are what they do:

FUNC button press

Preview

Depth-of-field preview.

Fv lock

Tap the FUNC button, the flash goes off and meters itself - once. Now every succeeding shot needs no preflashes! This means that, so long as your distance stays unchanged, that you'll get instant shutter release, and more importantly, no blinking from the preflashes. This choice fires the preflashes only once, and uses that information for every succeeding shot until you reset it.

It resets itself when the meter turns off, or if you tap the Function Button again.

AE/AF lock

Locks exposure and focus.

AE lock only

Locks exposure.

AE lock (Reset on release)

Locks exposure and holds it until you take a picture, the meter turns off or you press FUNC again.

AE lock (Hold)

Locks exposure and holds it until the meter turns off or you press FUNC again.

AF lock only

Locks focus.

Flash Off

Doesn't fire the flash so long as you hold the FUNC button.

Bracketing burst

In single frame mode, the D700 goes off and shoots an entire bracketing sequence as set elsewhere.

Matrix

Goes into Matrix metering.

Center-Weighted

Goes into CW metering.

Spot

Goes into spot metering when held

Access top item in My Menu

Overrides anything else, except picture taking, and brings you to your top menu item.

Live View:

Does the same thing as the [Lv] position of the advance mode dial.

+NEF

When you hold the FUNC button while taking a picture, or press it before, you'll also get an NEF file along with your JPG. This only works while shooting JPG, not with TIFF.

Virtual Horizon

Uses the finder's bar-graph display to work as an electronic level to keep your photos level.

FUNC button + dials

Chose Image Area

Hold FUNC and turn the dial to get digital zoom; which selects DX even if you're shooting an FX lens. (see crop factor.)

Lock

Hold FUNC and spin the dials to lock shutter speed or aperture at its current setting. The only time I use this might be in the studio when I don't want my manual sync speed to get knocked.

1 step spd/aperture

I do this in the exposure CSM, but here you can force the D700 to shift in full stops as long as you hold the FUNC button.

Chose non-CPU lens number

You use this to select easily among the various manual-focus lenses you've programmed under enter non-CPU lens data.

Auto bracketing

This programs the FUNC button to replace the BKT button of earlier cameras.

Dynamic AF area

This lets you spin the dials to select the dynamic AF area. I have no idea how this differs from the other AF settings.


f6 Assign preview button       top

This selects what the depth-of-field preview button does. If you chose anything other than Preview, you usually lose the preview function.

Many of these are the same as the options for the FUNC button. There are more clever functions than there ar buttons to which to assign them.

I leave this one on preview.

Preview button press

Preview: Depth-of-field preview.

Fv lock: Tap the preview button, the flash goes off and meters itself - once. Now every succeeding shot needs no preflashes! This means that, so long as your distance stays unchanged, that you'll get instant shutter release, and more importantly, no blinking from the preflashes. This choice fires the preflashes only once, and uses that information for every succeeding shot until you reset it.

It resets itself when the meter turns off, or if you tap the preview button again.

AE/AF lock

Locks exposure and focus.

AE lock only

Locks exposure.

AE lock (Reset on release)

Locks exposure and holds it until you take a picture, the meter turns off or you press preview again.

AE lock (Hold)

Locks exposure and holds it until the meter turns off or you press preview again.

AF lock only

Locks focus.

Flash Off

Doesn't fire the flash so long as you hold the preview button.

Bracketing burst

In single frame mode, the D700 goes off and shoots an entire bracketing sequence as set elsewhere.

Matrix

Goes into Matrix metering.

Center-Weighted

Goes into CW metering.

Spot

Goes into spot metering when held

Access top item in My Menu

Overrides anything else, except picture taking, and brings you to your top menu item.

Live View

Does the same thing as the [Lv] position of the advance mode dial.

+NEF

When you hold the preview button while taking a picture, or press it before, you'll also get an NEF file along with your JPG. This only works while shooting JPG, not with TIFF.

Virtual Horizon

Uses the finder's bar-graph display to work as an electronic level to keep your photos level.

Preview + command dials

Chose Image Area

Hold preview and turn the dial to get digital zoom; which selects DX even if you're shooting an FX lens. (see crop factor.)

Lock

Hold preview and spin the dials to lock shutter speed or aperture at its current setting. The only time I use this might be in the studio when I don't want my manual sync speed to get knocked.

1 step spd/aperture

I do this in the exposure CSM, but here you can force the D700 to shift in full stops as long as you hold the preview button.

Chose non-CPU lens number

You use this to select easily among the various manual-focus lenses (or zoom settings) you've programmed under enter non-CPU lens data.

Auto bracketing

This programs the preview button to replace the BKT button of earlier cameras.

Dynamic AF area

This lets you spin the dials to select the dynamic AF area. I have no idea how this differs from the other AF settings.


f7 Assign AE-L/AF-L button       top

This sets the function of the AE-L/AF-L button on the rear of the D700. It also can be set to many of the same functions as the other buttons.

I set mine to AE lock. This way I point the camera where I want my exposure, and hold the button until I recompose and make my exposure.

AE-L/AF-L button press

Preview

Depth-of-field preview.

Fv lock

Tap the AE-L/AF-L button, the flash goes off and meters itself - once. Now every succeeding shot needs no preflashes! This means that, so long as your distance stays unchanged, that you'll get instant shutter release, and more importantly, no blinking from the preflashes. This choice fires the preflashes only once, and uses that information for every succeeding shot until you reset it.

It resets itself when the meter turns off, or if you tap the AE-L/AF-L button again.

AE/AF lock

Locks exposure and focus.

AE lock only

Locks exposure.

AE lock (Reset on release)

Locks exposure and holds it until you take a picture, the meter turns off or you press AE-L/AF-L again.

AE lock (Hold)

Locks exposure and holds it until the meter turns off or you press AE-L/AF-L again.

AF lock only

Locks focus.

AF-ON

Focuses while you press the AE-L/AF-L button.

Flash Off

Doesn't fire the flash so long as you hold the AE-L/AF-L button.

Bracketing burst

In single frame mode, the D700 goes off and shoots an entire bracketing sequence as set elsewhere.

Matrix

Goes into Matrix metering.

Center-Weighted

Goes into CW metering.

Spot

Goes into spot metering when held

Access top item in My Menu

Overrides anything else, except picture taking, and brings you to your top menu item.

Live View

Does the same thing as the [Lv] position of the advance mode dial.

+NEF

When you hold the AE-L/AF-L button while taking a picture, or press it before, you'll also get an NEF file along with your JPG. This only works while shooting JPG, not with TIFF.

Virtual Horizon

Uses the finder's bar-graph display to work as an electronic level to keep your photos level.

AE-L/AF-L button + dials

Chose Image Area

Hold AE-L/AF-L and turn the dial to get digital zoom; which selects DX even if you're shooting an FX lens. (see crop factor.)

Lock

Hold AE-L/AF-L and spin the dials to lock shutter speed or aperture at its current setting. The only time I use this might be in the studio when I don't want my manual sync speed to get knocked.

Chose non-CPU lens number

You use this to select easily among the various manual-focus lenses you've programmed under enter non-CPU lens data.

Auto bracketing

This programs the AE-L/AF-L button to replace the BKT button of earlier cameras.

Dynamic AF area

This lets you spin the dials to select the dynamic AF area. I have no idea how this differs from the other AF settings.


f8 Shutter spd & aperture lock        top

This allows one to lock the shutter or aperture.

It doesn't do anything in Program exposure mode.

It locks the shutter in Shutter-priority, the aperture in Aperture priority, and will let you lock either or both in Manual exposure more.

Older cameras sometimes had a dedicated button for this.


f9 Customize command dials       top

This allows some very clever things you'll appreciate.

Reverse Rotation: So what.

Change main/sub: So what.

Aperture Setting: Lets you set apertures with the rings on the lens if you desire.

Menus and playback: Set this! If you do, the rear dial now can scroll quickly among your shots, and the front dial scrolls among the various data screens.


f10 Release button to use dial       top

This lets you tap a button once to adjust instead of having to keep holding it. You can keep adjusting until you tap the shutter, at which time it cancels.

I don't use this.


f11 No memory card?        top

Nikon defaults this to the wrong position so that D700s can be shot in camera stores without CF cards. Be sure to set this to LOCK so that you'll never be shooting blanks!

If you don't set this away from the default of OK, you could shoot for a week and, if you don't try to play back other shots, might not notice you have no card!

Nikon does put up a red DEMO warning flag on playback, and the fact that they call it Demo means that you know it was done to help old-style retail camera stores that no longer exist, not to help photographers.

Earlier model cameras used to default to the correct LOCK position, but this meant that retail camera stores needed salespeople who knew how to use a camera to set it up so it could shoot in-store. Those days are gone: the default of ENABLE is so these can be put out by the janitor at Best Buy today for people to try.

Don't forget to set this to LOCK!


f12 Reverse indicators       top

Nikon's exposure meters have always read backwards. More exposure goes to the left, and less exposure goes to the right. Huh?

Nikon's rangefinder cameras of the 1940s had shutter dials and aperture rings which rotated in one direction. No big deal, but when Nikon added meters to cameras in the 1960s, the meters had to read to make sense as you moved the dials, so Nikon's meter needles and bar graphs have always gone in the wrong direction. (The superior vertical bar graphs of the D3, D2 and F6 don't have this problem: up is more.)

Thankfully Nikon has never changed this, since in whatever decade they do, there will be massive confusion among all Nikon users familiar with the (wrong) way it's been forever.

For newcomers, you can use this menu to flip things back to normal, as Canon has done it since their EOS cameras of the 1980s. If you do, more goes to the right.


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KNOBS and BUTTONS

     FRONT

     TOP PANEL

     BACK

MENUS

     PLAYBACK   

     SHOOTING MENU

     CUSTOM SETTING MENU

          a Autofocus

          b Metering/Exposure

          c Timers/AE&AF Lock

          d Shooting/Display

          e Bracketing/Flash

          f Controls

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