dtcls100
Well-known
This is a problem that doesn't have any practical photo implications, because you can't use a Nikon D750 (or any digital camera) without batteries. But I am curious about this problem and would appreciate it if any of you can explain how and why this happens.
I was charging up the batteries in my Nikon D750 and MB-D16 battery pack today, given my role as official photographer at my daughter's 13th birthday party and a community holiday event tomorrow evening, as I expect to take about 1500-2000 photos. After removing the batteries, I happened to look through the D750's viewfinder and saw everything was somewhat dark and blurry, which didn't change when I tried to focus the mounted manual Nikon 28 f2.8 AiS lens. I thought the diopter adjustment had slipped, but that was not the case. When I put the batteries back into the camera (even without turning it on), the viewfinder appeared normal. Took the batteries out again, the viewfinder was again dark and blurry.
Put them back in, the viewfinder returned to normal.
I wonder why this is. Nikon lenses (whether AF or non-AF) are not focus by wire lenses, as they focus perfectly well on my non-AF bodies -- FM3a and FE2 -- as well as my Nikon F6, even without batteries. The viewfinder of the D750 is an optical viewfinder whose view should not be affected when the batteries are removed. Obviously, I am missing something here. Anybody know something about this?
I was charging up the batteries in my Nikon D750 and MB-D16 battery pack today, given my role as official photographer at my daughter's 13th birthday party and a community holiday event tomorrow evening, as I expect to take about 1500-2000 photos. After removing the batteries, I happened to look through the D750's viewfinder and saw everything was somewhat dark and blurry, which didn't change when I tried to focus the mounted manual Nikon 28 f2.8 AiS lens. I thought the diopter adjustment had slipped, but that was not the case. When I put the batteries back into the camera (even without turning it on), the viewfinder appeared normal. Took the batteries out again, the viewfinder was again dark and blurry.
Put them back in, the viewfinder returned to normal.
I wonder why this is. Nikon lenses (whether AF or non-AF) are not focus by wire lenses, as they focus perfectly well on my non-AF bodies -- FM3a and FE2 -- as well as my Nikon F6, even without batteries. The viewfinder of the D750 is an optical viewfinder whose view should not be affected when the batteries are removed. Obviously, I am missing something here. Anybody know something about this?