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ISO bracketing value

[0 – 100]

Set this value to bracket via ISO. This value is multiplied by the Value factor below to arrive at the final ISO value that will be used for bracketing. A value of 2, with a Value factor of 10, will increase or decrease the ISO by 20 for following exposures.

Value factor

[Off, 1, 10, 100]

Used as a multiplier for the ISO bracketing value.

Bracketing type

[+/-, , +]

With all bracketing types the first exposure uses the current exposure settings of the camera. On following exposures the exposure settings are adjusted as described below.

+/-

This bracketing type will alternatively apply the bracketing value by first subtracting then adding. The sequence goes like this…

0 Ev, -1Ev, +1Ev, -2Ev, +2Ev, -3Ev, +3Ev, etc. Bracketing will continue until you release the shutter. So for example lets say you set the TV bracketing to “2 Ev”, and when you half-press the shutter you notice an exposure time of 1 second. When you fully depress the shutter you will get exposures at these times: 1 sec, ¼ sec, 4 sec, 1/15 sec, 15 sec, 1/60 sec, 15 sec, 1/250 sec, 15 sec, etc.

This bracketing type works as above but will only reduce the exposure value. Using the above example, the exposure times would be 1 sec, ¼ sec, 1/15 sec, 1/60 sec, 1/250 sec, etc.

+

This bracketing type works as above but will only increase the exposure value. Using the above example, the exposure times would be 1 sec, 4 sec, 15 sec. Once the camera’s limit is reached, subsequent exposures will occur at the maximum (or minimum) setting.

Clear Bracket Values on Start

Enable [] / Disable [ ]

Enable this option to turn off bracketing when the camera is turned off.

Add raw-suffix

Enable [] / Disable [ ]

In bracketing mode you now have the option to add a suffix to the raw filename, so that later you can easily identify the RAWs that were created during bracketing, it is disabled at default.

Custom Auto ISO < Extra Photo Operations < Main Menu

This feature has 2 purposes: Allow the user to define the exact ranges of ISO used in

AutoISO and Auto-HI. As an example: Expand the AutoISO range from 80-200 to 50-400.

Give additional information to the camera to allow it to select the optimal shutter speed (to avoid blur or get the right artistic exposure) and ISO instead of some sub-optimal default...

As an example: Use a faster shutter and higher ISO when shooting sports, but go for a slower

shutter and minimal ISO when shooting still landscapes) Method: The camera will try to maintain lowest ISO as long as shutter speed is no-slower than user defined (more below). Custom AutoISO will kick-in whenever ISO HI/AutoISO is chosen. This allows a quick manual override by choosing a specific ISO value.