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I take a photo with the cap on, set to shutter priority mode and set to 30s. After photo is taken and the NR job runs, I end up with a black picture and a red line/haze down the right side of the photo and across the top of the photo.

  1. Should I suspect an issue with lens/body?
  2. What would you do to diagnose the issue?
  3. Am I over-reacting and this is just a known issue (only currently affects my astrophotography)

Equipment

Nikon D90 with 18-200mm Nikkor and Nikkor 85mm f/1.8g lenses. ISO 2000+

NOTE: Have not experimented to see how low of an ISO I can go before the artifact disappears

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2 Answers 2

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I think it's quite normal -- especially if you are using a high ISO (sensitivity). It is something I experienced on my old D50.

I think that it is actually a sensor artefact caused by heat within the camera, rather than light leaking in somewhere, though that could also contribute.

Note that for long exposures you should cover up the viewfinder to prevent light entering from the rear of the camera.

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  • \$\begingroup\$ Am glad to here this! I did not want to react on something that was possibly normal. I had come to conclusion it was due to high ISO and/or the NR and not an actual hardware problem. \$\endgroup\$
    – Wayne
    Nov 9, 2010 at 12:21
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I've never shot Nikon DSLRs in a high ISO/long exposure situation, but I'd be willing to bet it is caused by light leaking through the viewfinder and passing around the edge of the mirror when it is up. Just a theory. I've never seen anything similar with my Canons (5DII & 7D) when doing long exposure night photography. Long exposure NR wouldn't catch it because the shutter is closed when the "noise only" exposure is made and subtracted from the first exposure.

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