Nikon D80 wired remote

From BitWizard WIKI
Revision as of 16:59, 18 February 2012 by Rew (talk | contribs) (Created page with ' I'm working on a "gigapan" like system that will take a panorama. For this my board will have to tell the camera to take a picture. A hack would be to use a servo and push the s…')

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

I'm working on a "gigapan" like system that will take a panorama. For this my board will have to tell the camera to take a picture. A hack would be to use a servo and push the shutter button, but a wired remote would give more reliable results.

Somehow, I had come to think that instead of pulling pins to ground, my camera had a pin connected to VCC and that we had to pull things up to that voltage level. However things were not working properly.

This seems NOT to be the case!

The situation is as follows.

My (cheap) wired remote cable has three wires, white, yellow and red. white is GND, red is FOCUS and yellow is SHUTTER.

In rest you can measure about 5V on the FOCUS pin (I've observed 4.3V). To activate the focus, pull the FOCUS pin low. At this moment, the camera will enable the pullup on the SHUTTER button. Before that it won't be able to see you connecting it to ground because it already IS at ground. To trigger a snapshot, pull SHUTTER low.