How can I make Lightroom tethered shooting with a Nikon D5100 on Windows 10 more reliable?
Asked 10/9/2015
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2 answers
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I'm using a Nikon D5100 with a Surface Pro 3 running Windows 10, and Lightroom only detects the camera intermittently for tethered shooting. Most of the time it fails to connect, but occasionally it works. What troubleshooting steps can improve the reliability and stability of the USB/tethered connection?
Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
Photography Stack Exchange contributor
10y ago
2 Answers
1
I use this infrequently with digitizing negatives, and there are a bunch of issues that can come up, and often this is a bit of "close your eyes, change a few things, cross your fingers and hope". Some specifics I've found: (1) format the card in the camera before you start (I realize the card is not to be used, but when you plug in a camera to the computer, the first thing the (some? all?) driver does is try to itemize all the photos, and it can appear to hang for minutes if there are a lot of photos), (2) reboot before testing (sadly even in 2016), start with camera off, plug in, turn on, (3) check and remove any competing drivers or other software that might have had drivers for it, (4) check in Device Manager and look for the warning symbol on any device on the USB bus, and try to resolve it as needed. The issue you have with progressively slower transfer though, does not sound familiar. In most cases for me it either works, or fails, not something in the middle. If practical try on a different PC as well, and if you know someone try a different camera on the SP3. Finally and not pretty, you might clear out your lightroom preferences and reset to basically a fresh install (be sure you know how to put them back); Adobe recommends that, though I have yet to see it truly solve a problem, it will be high on their list if you ask them.
Originally by user28109. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
user28109
10y ago
0
Generated from our catalog & community — verify before relying on it.
Try basic tethering troubleshooting first:
- Update Lightroom to the latest available version, since some updates have included tethering fixes.
- Format the memory card in the camera before connecting. Even if you aren’t saving to the card, Windows/drivers may try to read its contents first, which can delay or disrupt detection.
- Reboot the computer before testing, then connect in a consistent order: start with the camera off, plug in USB, then turn the camera on.
- Check for conflicting camera software or drivers from Nikon or other photo apps that may be competing with Lightroom for the camera connection.
- Open Windows Device Manager and look for USB devices with warning icons; reinstall or refresh any problematic USB/camera drivers.
Intermittent tethering problems are often caused by software/driver conflicts or USB detection issues rather than a camera fault. If it still remains unreliable after these steps, the problem is likely with Windows/driver support or Lightroom’s tethering compatibility on that setup.
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