METHOD
ONE - Setting Lens Specs by Using the Shooting Menu
Below, you’ll find both a quick summary and detail on
how to set the lens specs using the camera menus.
METHOD
ONE SUMMARY
1.
Open the Shooting Menu
2. Select Non-CPU lens data
3. Set the Focal Length
4. Set the Maximum Aperture
METHOD ONE DETAIL
Now,
you’ll need to set the Focal length, then the Maximum
aperture. See Figures 2 and 3 for the steps.

As in figure 2, select Focal length from the
menu. The next screen will give you a series of focal length
ranges, these are 6-45, 50-180, and 200-4000. Select the range
into which your lens best fits. (Examples: a 50mm or 135mm
lens fits best in the 50-180 selection, while a 300mm or 600mm
lens fits best in the 200-4000 selection)
If
you are using a zoom lens, there is no difference in the setup.
Simply enter the minimum focal length, and there should be
good results across the entire zoom range. (Example: an 80-200mm
zoom would go in the 50-180 range, since the MINIMUM focal
length is the important number!)

In figure 3, we see how to
set the Maximum aperture. The selections run from f/1.2 to
f/22, with an N/A selection for specialty lenses with no aperture
settings. Look at your lens, see what the largest aperture
is, and set it in the menu. For instance, my AI-S Nikkor 50mm
has a f/1.8 maximum aperture. If there is no exact match,
use the one closest to your lens’ actual maximum aperture.
Once again, with a zoom lens, just enter the
maximum aperture as you would on a prime lens. As long as
the zoom is not a variable aperture zoom, which most pro lenses
aren’t, you’ll be fine. Variable aperture zooms
are discussed in the Conclusion section at the end of this
article.
Remember
that we are only concerned with the MAXIMUM aperture. The
D2x will take the Maximum aperture menu setting and detect
the position of its aperture ring to know what aperture is
in use. As you turn the aperture dial on the lens the D2x
will adjust the meter accordingly.
-