Can't seem to Autofocus-->Nikon D90 Autofocus not working
I am a novice with a Nikon D90 and D40, with the basic kit lenses (18-55 f/3.5 - 5.6 and 55-200).
I only recently bought the D90, but have found that it is very finicky with its autofocus. Meaning: In some situations, it won't autofocus while in any shooting mode.
This has happened a few times before, in various locations and lighting situations, and I've just played it off as me being inexperienced, but this a.m. I set up on a ridge on my tripod with the 18-55 lens hoping to get some shots of the mountains being lit by the sun as it came up, and, same thing. It tried to focus once, then viewfinder just stayed blurry. Nothing I did would get it to focus.
So I brought the camera inside and tried taking a few shots in a well lit room, and there was a lot of "thinking" going on with the autofocus--in, out, and back in again before actually getting focused. I put the lens on my D40, and it was lightning fast getting focused and took the picture 100% of the time.
Can anyone explain why this might be happening here?
I know the D90 is a much smarter camera, and definately a more complex piece of hardware, but I just want to rule out photographer error before I start thinking the camera might be at fault. I have less than 200 actuations, so it really is brand new.
Thanks
I only recently bought the D90, but have found that it is very finicky with its autofocus. Meaning: In some situations, it won't autofocus while in any shooting mode.
This has happened a few times before, in various locations and lighting situations, and I've just played it off as me being inexperienced, but this a.m. I set up on a ridge on my tripod with the 18-55 lens hoping to get some shots of the mountains being lit by the sun as it came up, and, same thing. It tried to focus once, then viewfinder just stayed blurry. Nothing I did would get it to focus.
So I brought the camera inside and tried taking a few shots in a well lit room, and there was a lot of "thinking" going on with the autofocus--in, out, and back in again before actually getting focused. I put the lens on my D40, and it was lightning fast getting focused and took the picture 100% of the time.
Can anyone explain why this might be happening here?
I know the D90 is a much smarter camera, and definately a more complex piece of hardware, but I just want to rule out photographer error before I start thinking the camera might be at fault. I have less than 200 actuations, so it really is brand new.
Thanks
0
Comments
Are you able to get good results using manual focus?
HTH -
- Wil
BTW - Welcome to DGPF!
When I get home, I'll check that out.
I think I may have had the focus areas (pardon my loose grasp of the lingo) set up wierd.
I was trying to get a reading from my autofocus in auto mode so I could switch to manual to do a few shots for a multi-image pano.
I had a colleague come and mess about with it and it might be a problem solved. I'll get back to the board if it continues to be a problem.
Thanks for the help, and for the welcome.
But I believe if you can get fast, snappy autofocus with a lens on a D40, and the same lens on a D90 is not getting at least as fast a performance in AF, then something is awry in Denmark, unless there was a major change in subject and lighting.
Check your AF settings on your D90, but I would wonder if it is not broken somewhere.
Maybe one of the Nikonians who hang around here can give you a more optimistic answer.
Even the best AF can be challenged in the dark with soft fuzzy subjects with low contrast, but I find it hard to believe that the D40 outperforms the D90 with the same lens, and same lighting conditions.
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1. Not sure what to look for....this AF module....to tell if it's clean, or not.
2. It literally is brand new. Could it get dirty with such little use?
3. What would cause the AF module to be unclean this early in its life?
Thanks
Go through the manual and make sure it is set up properly.
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If your camera has a "sensor clean" mode, use that to flip the mirror up. The AF sensor is at the bottom of the mirror box. You typically see a pair of rectangular openings. Look for a piece of hair or lint on or above the AF sensor. The AF sensor itself is under the rectangular mask, so you need a dental mirror or similar to actually see the sensor.
Since the camera is brand new, it's not likely to find a problem, but it's possible.
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Sorry....
It's not what you look at that matters: Its what you see!
Nikon
http://www.time2smile.smugmug.com
The electronic contacts on the lens tell the camera what its suppose to do or what AF motor to use.
It's not what you look at that matters: Its what you see!
Nikon
http://www.time2smile.smugmug.com