View single post by Robert
 Posted: Sun Dec 15th, 2013 02:41
Robert



Joined: Sun Apr 1st, 2012
Location: South Lakeland, UK
Posts: 4066
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Hi Jason, some nice work there, I think once you get used to the D1x you will be at one with it, they are dated in todays terms but can still produce the goods and that's what counts.

I guess the limitations are ISO, which really runs out at 400 due to banding and noise and resolution which limits cropping, other than that you got a real tool. Noise can be handled to some extent with software editing.

Batteries may be one issue you could encounter, some of us on here have made our own Li-Ion batteries and JK's website has some info on that. The standard D1x battery *should* provide juice for about 300 NEF exposures but in reality that can drop to less than 100 in the cold or with a tired battery.

If you encounter black images and strange behaviour suspect the battery. Standard Nikon batteries have a life expectancy of not much more than a year of reasonable use before they 'slow down', I have a box full of dead ones.

When I built my first Li-Ion battery I got bored after 1,000 exposures and recharged while it was still going OK. I tend never to allow them to go completely flat so I don't really know what they are capable of.

The built in battery is another thing to bear in mind, that retains your settings and time/date, I have details of the battery and how to get at it if the need arrises, it's a soldering iron job but nothing too testing.

Like Eric said, a two button reset is a good idea, it resets most of the settings to the factory settings which isn't a bad place to start. There are two buttons The CSM and ISO,

Attachment: D1X Two button reset.jpg (Downloaded 43 times)



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Robert.