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sdai Registered: Aug 26, 2002 Total Posts: 3387 Country: Canada |
To those who just love this thing ... I just saw this on a web site based in Hong Kong. ![]() Cheers! |
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Peter F Registered: Aug 02, 2002 Total Posts: 1148 Country: Denmark |
it would be nice with a vertical grip to the D70 |
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tazo Registered: Oct 11, 2003 Total Posts: 8252 Country: United States |
is it just me or does this look like the vertical grip doesnt line up perfectly with the d70? looks odd... |
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sdai Registered: Aug 26, 2002 Total Posts: 3387 Country: Canada |
It's a DIY stuff, this person built it himself with a MB-18 and a ML-L3 ... I'm pretty sure this thing can be available as an after-market add-on if Nikon refuse to do so. ![]() |
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btb103 Registered: Oct 09, 2003 Total Posts: 480 Country: N/A |
That's good news, I had a feeling someone would do this. Hopefully someone can make this available to the masses. |
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lxdesign Registered: Jan 04, 2004 Total Posts: 5199 Country: Canada |
So, If I understand this correctly, there is no actual vertical grip, and the only way to get one is to modify the MB-18 - eee god! |
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Daschund Woof Registered: Jul 15, 2002 Total Posts: 14707 Country: United States |
lxdesign wrote: |
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Greg Dearing Registered: Jan 30, 2004 Total Posts: 17 Country: United States |
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Kenn Registered: Mar 12, 2004 Total Posts: 4 Country: United States |
Someone recently printed out the PTP functionality for the D70, which looks like it allows nearly full exposure control from the USB port. This makes a strong case for the possibility of a fully functional grip that includes not only an electronically controlled shutter release, but possibly also command dials and AF/AE lock. The only thing you wouldn't be able to do is voice recording (no support in-camera) or power the camera through the USB port, so if the grip were to have dual-batteries, you'd have to make sure the battery door on the D70 could be removed without being broken. |
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DigiSnap Mark Registered: Mar 12, 2004 Total Posts: 1 Country: United States |
If it were even reasonably easy, I'd have developed a USB/PTP remote control, but it's just not in the cards. USB is a very assymetric interface, in that the 'host' controller needs to have a lot of memory, a relatively huge amount of code, and a very fast processor. PC's have all of this infrastructure, but providing it in a small low power low cost device is simply not practical. |