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No card - how does that happen
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Sep 4, 2018 08:56:46   #
cdayton
 
Some UHH topics have mentioned the agony of completing a shoot and finding there was no card in the camera. Others have said two slots saved the day since they had left one empty. With a DSLR, I don’t understand how this happens. My D300 shows a message “No Memory Card” on start up; after a shot there is an icon on the image showing a card with a slash and the word Demo all in red. If I try to shoot with my D5200 there is a screen message “No SD card inserted” and my P900 says “No card present.” Finally, my Sony a6000 flashes “NO CARD” in red on the screen and viewfinder if I shoot. So, I repeat, how do you shoot dozens of DSLR shots without a card inserted?
PS I do understand how this happens with a film camera but even then if the rewind handle isn’t moving when you advance film, there is something amiss.

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Sep 4, 2018 09:13:19   #
Longshadow Loc: Audubon, PA, United States
 
Some cameras have an option to shoot without card. Not sure why, but they do.
I set mine to NOT shoot without card.

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Sep 4, 2018 09:19:04   #
AzPicLady Loc: Behind the camera!
 
Some cameras do allow the shutter to be tripped with no card. On some there is a setting in the menu items that turns that ability on or off. (I've set all my cameras but one to NOT allow shooting without a card.) Some cameras have a small, internal memory that will record a few frames.

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Sep 4, 2018 09:23:28   #
BebuLamar
 
I might have to look into the settings of my camera. The way it works now if I have the card it would takes pictures and doesn't turn on the LCD unless I press the play back button. If I don't have the card it would still take the picture and immediately displays the image on the LCD screen.

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Sep 4, 2018 09:38:27   #
CHG_CANON Loc: the Windy City
 
As others have noted, not every camera is the same. My Sony will, my Canon won't.

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Sep 4, 2018 09:52:49   #
AndyH Loc: Massachusetts and New Hampshire
 
Longshadow wrote:
Some cameras have an option to shoot without card. Not sure why, but they do.
I set mine to NOT shoot without card.


That's the $64 question. Why on earth would anyone want to set this option to allow shooting without a card?

Any ideas?

Andy

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Sep 4, 2018 10:09:44   #
Longshadow Loc: Audubon, PA, United States
 
AndyH wrote:
That's the $64 question. Why on earth would anyone want to set this option to allow shooting without a card?

Any ideas?

Andy

Absolutely none... At least any practical ones.

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Sep 4, 2018 10:17:17   #
AndyH Loc: Massachusetts and New Hampshire
 
Longshadow wrote:
Absolutely none... At least any practical ones.


I do recall a camera salesman telling me that it was set that way for "Demo" purposes, so that a prospective buyer could "Try out" the camera by shooting various images and immediately previewing them on the screen. That doesn't seem like much of a reason to boobytrap high end cameras with a setting that can inadvertantly cost a user some serious time or money. Now the salesman was from Wally World, and was talking about point and shoot models, so I doubt he knew much about Canikony's corporate reasoning for leaving that setting in their DSLR products...

It's always struck me as curious...

Andy

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Sep 4, 2018 11:26:59   #
kpmac Loc: Ragley, La
 
Perhaps for tethered shooting? I don't know anything about tethered shooting but it seems it might not need a card.

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Sep 4, 2018 11:38:00   #
Longshadow Loc: Audubon, PA, United States
 
kpmac wrote:
Perhaps for tethered shooting? I don't know anything about tethered shooting but it seems it might not need a card.

Possibly!

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Sep 4, 2018 11:41:46   #
JohnSwanda Loc: San Francisco
 
AndyH wrote:
That's the $64 question. Why on earth would anyone want to set this option to allow shooting without a card?

Any ideas?

Andy


You don't need a card when you shoot tethered, as the card is bypassed anyway. I don't remove the card when I shoot tethered, so I don't have to set the camera to shoot without one.

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Sep 4, 2018 11:49:47   #
AndyH Loc: Massachusetts and New Hampshire
 
JohnSwanda wrote:
You don't need a card when you shoot tethered, as the card is bypassed anyway. I don't remove the card when I shoot tethered, so I don't have to set the camera to shoot without one.


So the setting is for photographers who either exclusively shoot tethered AND may have forgotten to put a card in the slot? Seems like a pretty narrow segment of users!

Andy

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Sep 4, 2018 11:58:22   #
JohnSwanda Loc: San Francisco
 
AndyH wrote:
So the setting is for photographers who either exclusively shoot tethered AND may have forgotten to put a card in the slot? Seems like a pretty narrow segment of users!

Andy


But still a setting that segment of users need. I just wonder how someone manages to change that setting accidentally.

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Sep 4, 2018 12:14:09   #
mwsilvers Loc: Central New Jersey
 
Longshadow wrote:
Some cameras have an option to shoot without card. Not sure why, but they do.
I set mine to NOT shoot without card.

One of the reasons that option is available maybe for demonstration purposes in stores. I can pick up a camera without a card take images and still see them on the LCD screen even though they don't record to a card. Other than that though I can't imagine what one would use it for.

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Sep 4, 2018 12:21:17   #
Longshadow Loc: Audubon, PA, United States
 
mwsilvers wrote:
One of the reasons that option is available maybe for demonstration purposes in stores. I can pick up a camera without a card take images and still see them on the LCD screen even though they don't record to a card. Other than that though I can't imagine what one would use it for.

Thought of that. I wonder how long the image display might remain, default setting?

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