V1.02
Thom Hogan’s Complete Guide to the Nikon D300
Page 309
õ
To set compensation hold the
£
button on the top right
side of the camera and rotate the Rear Command dial until
the value you want is shown in the top LCD. You can also see
the value while looking through the viewfinder.
Top
LCD:
Note: Choose the exposure compensation increment (third, half,
or full stops
94
) with Custom Setting #B3 (see page <538>).
Once set, exposure compensation remains set until you use
the control again and set a value of
0.0
.
Note: In Manual exposure mode, exposure compensation is
“invisible.” The zero point is moved when exposure
compensation is set. Try it. Set a correct exposure in Manual
exposure mode and then dial in compensation: you’ll see
that the manual exposure indicator moves off of
0
in direct
relationship to how much compensation you dialed in.
The D300 supports an alternate method of setting exposure
compensation via Custom Setting #B4; see “Exposure
Compensation Control” on page <539>. When you set this
alternate method, called “Easy Exposure Compensation” by
Nikon, one of the command dials on the camera is used to
adjust compensation values,
even when the
£
button is not
held down
! (
Which
dial is used depends upon your exposure
mode and the value of Custom Setting #F7.) Frankly, I think
this is a dangerous ability because if you forget that you have
it set, you may not notice that you’re setting compensation
instead of apertures or shutter speeds. Some D300 users do
94
Half stops are shown in a series like this:
0.0
,
0.5
,
1.0
,
1.5
,
2.0
, and so on. Third
stops are always rounded and are shown as
0.0
,
0.3
,
0.7
,
1.0
,
1.3
,
1.7
,
2.0
, and so on.