5D Mark II, 5D Mark III, 5D Mark IV, 5DS, 5DS R (5DSR) 1D Mark III, 1D X Mark III, 1Ds Mark III, 1D Mark IV, 1D C, 1D X, 1D X Mark II Hyper focal distance and DOF calculator Focus peaking (areas in sharp focus can be highlighted) Automated focus bracketing (focus bracketing, exposure bracketing and time lapse shooting can be combined in any way possible) Wi-Fi support (for cameras with built-in Wi-Fi unit, as well as external Nikon WT and Canon WFT units) Only Wi-Fi connection is possible on iOS 12! USB connection is supported on iOS 13.0 and newer. Right.Helicon Remote is a utility for tethered shooting and camera remote control compatible with all recent Nikon and Canon DSLR cameras. Otherwise it'll take ages to transfer the images to the phone and you'll probably run out of phone space before that's complete. In there scroll down to The Download settings and make sure they are all set to Leave In Camera. Important note: Go into the app settings and select Image Saving. Make your selections for settings and shoot away. Helicon Remote should then connect and go to the Live View screen and you should be able to see the view that the camera is seeing. Tap Select A Camera in the top left area. Open up Helicon Remote and tap Exposure to get you in the right place to select a camera. Enter the password and the phone will connect to the camera's wifi network. It will then want the password you entered earlier on the encryption key step. Now open your iPhone and go into wifi settings and look for the SSID of the network we created in the camera. Select the network profile you created (Helicon) and then switch on the network connection. Now power up the camera and go into Network Settings. You can click OK or next or whatever and close the program on the PC. The program will detect the camera and say something like All Done. Then run the Nikon Wireless Transmitter Utility on the PC. Follow the instructions and connect the camera to the PC with a mini USB cable. Next screen is Pairing Computer And Camera. After a few moments the camera will show you the IP address and the mask it's come up with. Next screen is how the IP address is assigned. On the next screen which says something like "you can simplify setup by copying profile to computer." Select No. Enter an SSID for the wireless network you'll be connecting to using your phone. Select Camera Control.Īdd a name for the network profile. And you will need to connect the camera to a Windows PC with the Nikon Wireless Transmitter Utility installed. After each step on the camera you should proceed to the next screen by selecting OK or whatever it needs. It took quite a lot of faffing around but it does work now and I have a simple process for making it work.įor Nikon D4, WT-5 wireless adapter, and iPhone. I have tried it anyway but no success.Ĭan anyone help me connect the app to the Nikon D4 using the WT-5 wifi adapter please? So the settings and screens are different. I have also been through the instructions here: īut those instructions are for the WT-4, not the WT-5. The app also suggests going to Tools - Network cameras but this setting does not appear in the iOS app. Give it a name, the IP is the IP of the camera shown in the D4 network settings menu, try to connect and the app reports the error: A network device with the specified error is not found. I have added the camera in the app settings. But the Helicon Remote app does not see it. So I know that the phone is definitely connected to the camera. The phone is connected to the wifi adapter and I can use the built in server to control the camera remotely using a web browser, but I can't make the Helicon Remote app see the camera. However I can't get the app on the phone to see the camera. And I have the WT-5 wireless adapter for my Nikon D4. Problem is I don't want to lug a laptop around in the field. I've got the remote and stacking software working perfectly USB tethered to a laptop.
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