Can I set non-full stop ISO values on my D3400?











up vote
2
down vote

favorite












I recently got into photography and use a Nikon D3400. I have started shooting in Aperture Priority and Manual modes about 2 weeks ago and I noticed something strange regarding the ISO. When I am manually setting it, it starts from 100 and then the values keep doubling. If I switch over to Auto mode however, I get photos with odd ISO values, like 360. Is it at all possible for me to set an ISO value, for example between 400 and 800? If not, why does Auto mode seem to have more control over the ISO than the other modes?










share|improve this question




























    up vote
    2
    down vote

    favorite












    I recently got into photography and use a Nikon D3400. I have started shooting in Aperture Priority and Manual modes about 2 weeks ago and I noticed something strange regarding the ISO. When I am manually setting it, it starts from 100 and then the values keep doubling. If I switch over to Auto mode however, I get photos with odd ISO values, like 360. Is it at all possible for me to set an ISO value, for example between 400 and 800? If not, why does Auto mode seem to have more control over the ISO than the other modes?










    share|improve this question


























      up vote
      2
      down vote

      favorite









      up vote
      2
      down vote

      favorite











      I recently got into photography and use a Nikon D3400. I have started shooting in Aperture Priority and Manual modes about 2 weeks ago and I noticed something strange regarding the ISO. When I am manually setting it, it starts from 100 and then the values keep doubling. If I switch over to Auto mode however, I get photos with odd ISO values, like 360. Is it at all possible for me to set an ISO value, for example between 400 and 800? If not, why does Auto mode seem to have more control over the ISO than the other modes?










      share|improve this question















      I recently got into photography and use a Nikon D3400. I have started shooting in Aperture Priority and Manual modes about 2 weeks ago and I noticed something strange regarding the ISO. When I am manually setting it, it starts from 100 and then the values keep doubling. If I switch over to Auto mode however, I get photos with odd ISO values, like 360. Is it at all possible for me to set an ISO value, for example between 400 and 800? If not, why does Auto mode seem to have more control over the ISO than the other modes?







      nikon iso nikon-d3400






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Nov 18 at 12:41









      Philip Kendall

      16.4k44881




      16.4k44881










      asked Nov 18 at 9:33









      Syn

      1162




      1162






















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes

















          up vote
          9
          down vote



          accepted











          Is it at all possible for me to set an ISO value, for example between 400 and 800?




          Not on the D3400. It is on higher end cameras.




          If not, why does Auto mode seem to have more control over the ISO than the other modes?




          Because Nikon decided to implement it this way. The are two arguments for this, both of which are probably somewhat true:




          1. The D3400 is an entry-level camera and as such it makes sense to keep the available options as small as possible. More options give more settings for beginners to mess up.

          2. Restricting the D3400 to only full stop ISO settings gives another way for Nikon to differentiate between their low end and high end models without fundamentally changing the hardware. Therefore they make more profit.


          (For avoidance of doubt, this isn't an anti-Nikon rant; Canon definitely do the same thing, Fujifilm do something similar with shutter speeds and I suspect other brands do the same as well).






          share|improve this answer



















          • 1




            For what it's worth, my Fuji X100s also sets automatic exposure times which aren't available manually with 1/3 stops increments. (e.g. 1/70s or 1/105s).
            – Eric Duminil
            Nov 18 at 18:28










          • it's also not really useful or needed. you can easily correct an image's exposure by a factor of 2-4, so a factor of 1.5 in ISO is without consequence (and nearly rounding error for the camera)
            – Aganju
            Nov 19 at 20:57










          • I have a Nikon D500 (very high end apsc from nikon) but I doesn't found that option to set ISO values to something like 282 or 734 (and yes I have photos in autoISO with such kind of strange values)
            – Horitsu
            Nov 20 at 6:24










          • @Horitsu But you can set third stop ISOs on your D500. As Aganju points out, any more than that is definitely beyond the realms of "necessary". I'd put money on those odd ISO values being from mobile phones.
            – Philip Kendall
            Nov 20 at 6:57










          • @PhilipKendall Nope that are real ISO values from my D500. So where is my money? ;)
            – Horitsu
            Nov 21 at 9:09











          Your Answer








          StackExchange.ready(function() {
          var channelOptions = {
          tags: "".split(" "),
          id: "61"
          };
          initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

          StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
          // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
          if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
          StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
          createEditor();
          });
          }
          else {
          createEditor();
          }
          });

          function createEditor() {
          StackExchange.prepareEditor({
          heartbeatType: 'answer',
          convertImagesToLinks: false,
          noModals: true,
          showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
          reputationToPostImages: null,
          bindNavPrevention: true,
          postfix: "",
          imageUploader: {
          brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
          contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
          allowUrls: true
          },
          noCode: true, onDemand: true,
          discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
          ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
          });


          }
          });














           

          draft saved


          draft discarded


















          StackExchange.ready(
          function () {
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fphoto.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f102933%2fcan-i-set-non-full-stop-iso-values-on-my-d3400%23new-answer', 'question_page');
          }
          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown

























          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes








          up vote
          9
          down vote



          accepted











          Is it at all possible for me to set an ISO value, for example between 400 and 800?




          Not on the D3400. It is on higher end cameras.




          If not, why does Auto mode seem to have more control over the ISO than the other modes?




          Because Nikon decided to implement it this way. The are two arguments for this, both of which are probably somewhat true:




          1. The D3400 is an entry-level camera and as such it makes sense to keep the available options as small as possible. More options give more settings for beginners to mess up.

          2. Restricting the D3400 to only full stop ISO settings gives another way for Nikon to differentiate between their low end and high end models without fundamentally changing the hardware. Therefore they make more profit.


          (For avoidance of doubt, this isn't an anti-Nikon rant; Canon definitely do the same thing, Fujifilm do something similar with shutter speeds and I suspect other brands do the same as well).






          share|improve this answer



















          • 1




            For what it's worth, my Fuji X100s also sets automatic exposure times which aren't available manually with 1/3 stops increments. (e.g. 1/70s or 1/105s).
            – Eric Duminil
            Nov 18 at 18:28










          • it's also not really useful or needed. you can easily correct an image's exposure by a factor of 2-4, so a factor of 1.5 in ISO is without consequence (and nearly rounding error for the camera)
            – Aganju
            Nov 19 at 20:57










          • I have a Nikon D500 (very high end apsc from nikon) but I doesn't found that option to set ISO values to something like 282 or 734 (and yes I have photos in autoISO with such kind of strange values)
            – Horitsu
            Nov 20 at 6:24










          • @Horitsu But you can set third stop ISOs on your D500. As Aganju points out, any more than that is definitely beyond the realms of "necessary". I'd put money on those odd ISO values being from mobile phones.
            – Philip Kendall
            Nov 20 at 6:57










          • @PhilipKendall Nope that are real ISO values from my D500. So where is my money? ;)
            – Horitsu
            Nov 21 at 9:09















          up vote
          9
          down vote



          accepted











          Is it at all possible for me to set an ISO value, for example between 400 and 800?




          Not on the D3400. It is on higher end cameras.




          If not, why does Auto mode seem to have more control over the ISO than the other modes?




          Because Nikon decided to implement it this way. The are two arguments for this, both of which are probably somewhat true:




          1. The D3400 is an entry-level camera and as such it makes sense to keep the available options as small as possible. More options give more settings for beginners to mess up.

          2. Restricting the D3400 to only full stop ISO settings gives another way for Nikon to differentiate between their low end and high end models without fundamentally changing the hardware. Therefore they make more profit.


          (For avoidance of doubt, this isn't an anti-Nikon rant; Canon definitely do the same thing, Fujifilm do something similar with shutter speeds and I suspect other brands do the same as well).






          share|improve this answer



















          • 1




            For what it's worth, my Fuji X100s also sets automatic exposure times which aren't available manually with 1/3 stops increments. (e.g. 1/70s or 1/105s).
            – Eric Duminil
            Nov 18 at 18:28










          • it's also not really useful or needed. you can easily correct an image's exposure by a factor of 2-4, so a factor of 1.5 in ISO is without consequence (and nearly rounding error for the camera)
            – Aganju
            Nov 19 at 20:57










          • I have a Nikon D500 (very high end apsc from nikon) but I doesn't found that option to set ISO values to something like 282 or 734 (and yes I have photos in autoISO with such kind of strange values)
            – Horitsu
            Nov 20 at 6:24










          • @Horitsu But you can set third stop ISOs on your D500. As Aganju points out, any more than that is definitely beyond the realms of "necessary". I'd put money on those odd ISO values being from mobile phones.
            – Philip Kendall
            Nov 20 at 6:57










          • @PhilipKendall Nope that are real ISO values from my D500. So where is my money? ;)
            – Horitsu
            Nov 21 at 9:09













          up vote
          9
          down vote



          accepted







          up vote
          9
          down vote



          accepted







          Is it at all possible for me to set an ISO value, for example between 400 and 800?




          Not on the D3400. It is on higher end cameras.




          If not, why does Auto mode seem to have more control over the ISO than the other modes?




          Because Nikon decided to implement it this way. The are two arguments for this, both of which are probably somewhat true:




          1. The D3400 is an entry-level camera and as such it makes sense to keep the available options as small as possible. More options give more settings for beginners to mess up.

          2. Restricting the D3400 to only full stop ISO settings gives another way for Nikon to differentiate between their low end and high end models without fundamentally changing the hardware. Therefore they make more profit.


          (For avoidance of doubt, this isn't an anti-Nikon rant; Canon definitely do the same thing, Fujifilm do something similar with shutter speeds and I suspect other brands do the same as well).






          share|improve this answer















          Is it at all possible for me to set an ISO value, for example between 400 and 800?




          Not on the D3400. It is on higher end cameras.




          If not, why does Auto mode seem to have more control over the ISO than the other modes?




          Because Nikon decided to implement it this way. The are two arguments for this, both of which are probably somewhat true:




          1. The D3400 is an entry-level camera and as such it makes sense to keep the available options as small as possible. More options give more settings for beginners to mess up.

          2. Restricting the D3400 to only full stop ISO settings gives another way for Nikon to differentiate between their low end and high end models without fundamentally changing the hardware. Therefore they make more profit.


          (For avoidance of doubt, this isn't an anti-Nikon rant; Canon definitely do the same thing, Fujifilm do something similar with shutter speeds and I suspect other brands do the same as well).







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Nov 18 at 19:01

























          answered Nov 18 at 12:37









          Philip Kendall

          16.4k44881




          16.4k44881








          • 1




            For what it's worth, my Fuji X100s also sets automatic exposure times which aren't available manually with 1/3 stops increments. (e.g. 1/70s or 1/105s).
            – Eric Duminil
            Nov 18 at 18:28










          • it's also not really useful or needed. you can easily correct an image's exposure by a factor of 2-4, so a factor of 1.5 in ISO is without consequence (and nearly rounding error for the camera)
            – Aganju
            Nov 19 at 20:57










          • I have a Nikon D500 (very high end apsc from nikon) but I doesn't found that option to set ISO values to something like 282 or 734 (and yes I have photos in autoISO with such kind of strange values)
            – Horitsu
            Nov 20 at 6:24










          • @Horitsu But you can set third stop ISOs on your D500. As Aganju points out, any more than that is definitely beyond the realms of "necessary". I'd put money on those odd ISO values being from mobile phones.
            – Philip Kendall
            Nov 20 at 6:57










          • @PhilipKendall Nope that are real ISO values from my D500. So where is my money? ;)
            – Horitsu
            Nov 21 at 9:09














          • 1




            For what it's worth, my Fuji X100s also sets automatic exposure times which aren't available manually with 1/3 stops increments. (e.g. 1/70s or 1/105s).
            – Eric Duminil
            Nov 18 at 18:28










          • it's also not really useful or needed. you can easily correct an image's exposure by a factor of 2-4, so a factor of 1.5 in ISO is without consequence (and nearly rounding error for the camera)
            – Aganju
            Nov 19 at 20:57










          • I have a Nikon D500 (very high end apsc from nikon) but I doesn't found that option to set ISO values to something like 282 or 734 (and yes I have photos in autoISO with such kind of strange values)
            – Horitsu
            Nov 20 at 6:24










          • @Horitsu But you can set third stop ISOs on your D500. As Aganju points out, any more than that is definitely beyond the realms of "necessary". I'd put money on those odd ISO values being from mobile phones.
            – Philip Kendall
            Nov 20 at 6:57










          • @PhilipKendall Nope that are real ISO values from my D500. So where is my money? ;)
            – Horitsu
            Nov 21 at 9:09








          1




          1




          For what it's worth, my Fuji X100s also sets automatic exposure times which aren't available manually with 1/3 stops increments. (e.g. 1/70s or 1/105s).
          – Eric Duminil
          Nov 18 at 18:28




          For what it's worth, my Fuji X100s also sets automatic exposure times which aren't available manually with 1/3 stops increments. (e.g. 1/70s or 1/105s).
          – Eric Duminil
          Nov 18 at 18:28












          it's also not really useful or needed. you can easily correct an image's exposure by a factor of 2-4, so a factor of 1.5 in ISO is without consequence (and nearly rounding error for the camera)
          – Aganju
          Nov 19 at 20:57




          it's also not really useful or needed. you can easily correct an image's exposure by a factor of 2-4, so a factor of 1.5 in ISO is without consequence (and nearly rounding error for the camera)
          – Aganju
          Nov 19 at 20:57












          I have a Nikon D500 (very high end apsc from nikon) but I doesn't found that option to set ISO values to something like 282 or 734 (and yes I have photos in autoISO with such kind of strange values)
          – Horitsu
          Nov 20 at 6:24




          I have a Nikon D500 (very high end apsc from nikon) but I doesn't found that option to set ISO values to something like 282 or 734 (and yes I have photos in autoISO with such kind of strange values)
          – Horitsu
          Nov 20 at 6:24












          @Horitsu But you can set third stop ISOs on your D500. As Aganju points out, any more than that is definitely beyond the realms of "necessary". I'd put money on those odd ISO values being from mobile phones.
          – Philip Kendall
          Nov 20 at 6:57




          @Horitsu But you can set third stop ISOs on your D500. As Aganju points out, any more than that is definitely beyond the realms of "necessary". I'd put money on those odd ISO values being from mobile phones.
          – Philip Kendall
          Nov 20 at 6:57












          @PhilipKendall Nope that are real ISO values from my D500. So where is my money? ;)
          – Horitsu
          Nov 21 at 9:09




          @PhilipKendall Nope that are real ISO values from my D500. So where is my money? ;)
          – Horitsu
          Nov 21 at 9:09


















           

          draft saved


          draft discarded



















































           


          draft saved


          draft discarded














          StackExchange.ready(
          function () {
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fphoto.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f102933%2fcan-i-set-non-full-stop-iso-values-on-my-d3400%23new-answer', 'question_page');
          }
          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown





















































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown

































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown







          Popular posts from this blog

          Сан-Квентин

          Алькесар

          Josef Freinademetz