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Help! With Nikon D40x Digital SLR Camera
#1

Hi Guys!

Great forum!
A question for you, which came up when I was taking pictures with my friend's new Nikon D40x Digital SLR Camera yesterday:

While I was reviewing the photos on the LCD on the back of the camera, the 'white space' taken in some of the pictures was flashing black and white! Is this a function in the camera's settings? Or is this a fault?

Anyone else experiencing this ???

Cheers

Ralph
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#2

It is the camera's way of telling you that the shot is overexposed, or the white bit is.
The histogram will have a small ( hopefully) white bar up the righthand side also.
Too much contrast between black/dark tones and white/grey tones is the problem.
minus the E/V to compensate.

Lumix LX5.
Canon 350 D.+ 18-55 Kit lens + Tamron 70-300 macro. + Canon 50mm f1.8 + Manfrotto tripod, in bag.
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#3

is this documented anywhere, or a known fact (function) with the camera?
My friend was originally taking some shots of a sunset and originally thought we may have 'burnt' the lense or something inside?

What is this black and white 'flashing' functionality called, so we can turn it off?

Cheers

Ralph
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#4

Hey Ralph, on my D50, you switch between display modes by pressing "Up/Down" on the 4-way controller... it toggles between the normal view, the histogram view, highlights view (which is the flashing one you're seeing) and a couple of info pages.


Hope that helps...
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#5

Cool! That's great. I'll try that out tonight on the camera.
Thanks for the very helpful advice! Smile

Blessings.

Ralph
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#6

It's a known function on most nikon slr's. if you scroll through your pictures using the left/right function of the 4-way button you can select any picture and, by using the up/down function you can go from full-frame picture to a readout of the data, and on to the histogram, from there it usually goes back to the picture but with all over-exposed areas flashing, (as you describe). just keep scrolling round using the up/down function and you will come back to the picture as you took it.
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#7

The flashing parts are highlights that have washed out. See the manual, page 52. I got a lot of this while shooting at the beach this last week, largely because of the vivid contrasts.
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