Nikon D7000 Digital Camera User Manual


 
Remote Control Mode
This option lets you select how you want the D7000 to respond to the optional ML-
L3 infrared remote control. I really like how this camera has IR sensors on both front
and back, which makes this remote much more useful. It’s smaller than the MC-D10
wired remote, and doesn’t need to be “plugged in” to use. You have three choices in this
menu entry:
2s Delayed remote. When you press the button on the remote, the shutter is trig-
gered two seconds later. Use this mode when you want a short delay before the pic-
ture is taken, say, for any camera movement to subside after you’ve adjusted one of
the other controls.
Quick response remote. When you press the button on the remote, the shutter is
triggered instantly. This mode is useful when you want to control the exact time
the picture is taken, say, when some wildlife appears in the frame, or when you’re
shooting remotely at a sports event.
Remote mirror up. When you press the button on the remote once, the mirror is
raised. Once all the vibration from the mirror flip has subsided, press the remote
button a second time to take the actual picture.
Chapter 8 Setup: Playback and Shooting Menus 273
PAUSE OR CANCEL INTERVAL SHOOTING
Press the MENU button between intervals (but not when images are still being recorded
to the memory card), choose the Interval Timer Shooting menu entry, and select Pause.
Interval shooting can also be paused by turning the camera on or off, or by rotating the
release mode dial to Live View, self-timer, or Mup positions. To resume the Interval
Timer Shooting menu again, press the multi selector left button, and choose Restart. You
may also select Off to stop the shooting entirely.