![]() Yea, $350 seems a lot for a Nikon flash, but if you had one, you would not be having any problems. A flash is the one time you should stick to camera-brand equipment. You generally do not do yourself any favors by buying 3rd party flash units. Otherwise, you are back to the manual process I described above. But if you buy an aftermarket flash, it must understand iTTL for it to work automatically. ![]() 109.95 PicturesPIus'' Filters for photo, video and digital From Sunpak. Nikon's is called iTTL (intelligent Through The Lens) metering. 9-Point Autofocusing or Spot AF Q AF or Manual Focus Q Program AE,Aperture. These days, cameras have intelligent flash systems. The wheel did not change anything on the flash - it just was a mechanical "calculator", to figure out the aperture. Finally (and there was sometimes a wheel to do this), you would set the wheel to the distance the subject was at, and the flash told you where to set the aperture. Then on the flash, set it to the ISO of the film you were using. In the old days, when using a manual flash, cameras were also manual exposure control. Or if it is not a manual flash, perhaps you have a flash not made for Nikon. I'm not familiar with your flash, and I'm not interested enough to download a manual, so I'm going to speculate.īut with your description of numbers on the back, sounds to me like you perhaps have a manual flash.
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