V1.02
Thom Hogan’s Complete Guide to the Nikon D300
Page 657
To Set Red-Eye Reduction
Set Red-eye reduction on the D300 by holding the Flash
Options button on the camera and turning the Rear Command
dial until
@
appears on the D300’s top LCD).
Note: Red-eye reduction works in most flash modes, but not in the
Repeating Flash mode.
SB-800 Notes
• The SB-800 uses the same European style power
connector as the SB-28DX, thus the SD-8A is the high
performance battery pack to use, not the SD-8.
• The D300’s focus mode should usually be set to Single
Servo AF, since the flash will not fire unless the subject is
in focus.
• The Autofocus Assist light on the SB-800 is used
automatically if the ambient light is low and you haven’t
turned this function off on the flash. Autofocus assist only
works at distances from 3.3 feet (1m) up to 33 feet (10m),
and is only guaranteed to work with lenses from 24mm to
105mm.
Note: The Autofocus Assist illuminator will not function unless the
central autofocus sensor is selected or Closest Subject
Priority is in effect.
Note: You can turn off the Autofocus Assist illuminator on the SB-
800 by holding the
Sel
button down for two seconds and
using the SB-800’s Direction pad to navigate to the option
and turn it OFF.
No AF-ILL
will appear in the flash’s LCD.
• If
the
[
indicator on the SB-800’s LCD panel is blinking,
that means that the flash needs you to set the aperture.
This happens in several situations: (1) in Automatic (A)
flash mode; or (2) when using lenses without a CPU (AI or
AI-S lenses). If the
[
is blinking, use the
Ô
and
Õ
buttons
to set the correct aperture on the flash (e.g. the aperture
that matches what is set on the camera).
• The SB-800 has an automatic standby power system. The
SB-800 automatically turns off 40 seconds after the