V1.02
Thom Hogan’s Complete Guide to the Nikon D300
Page 325
Nikon uses hue adjustments to shift the colors to better match
the odd balances of fluorescent tubes, so I’ve not included
them in the above table. Because fluorescent lighting uses
colored phosphors that don’t produce the entire light
spectrum, and because those phosphors decay at different
rates, most digital cameras have fluorescent settings that
attempt to deal with the overabundance of green/blue values
such light produces. The D300 does this, too. If you use the
fluorescent white balance settings on light that was produced
by a continuous spectrum light source (most other lighting),
you’re likely to see a cyan and/or green shift.)
Let’s put the D300 preset and settable Kelvin values in context
of actual lighting sources (all values except the first can be set
on the D300 in some way):
1930K Candlelight (value can’t be set on D300)
2500K
(lowest value that can be set on D300)
2550K
2650K
2700K
INCANDESCENT b6
2800K
INCANDESCENT b4
, 75-watt bulb
2850K
2900K
INCANDESCENT b2
, 100-watt bulb
2950K
3000K
INCANDESCENT
, 200-watt bulb
3100K
INCANDESCENT a2
3200K
INCANDESCENT a4
, Tungsten lighting
3300K
INCANDESCENT a6
3400K Standard photolamp
3600K
3700K
3800K
4000K
4200K
4300K
4500K
DIRECT SUN b6
4700K
DIRECT SUN b4
4900K
DIRECT SUN b2