Increase burst rate of camera?

10 years 5 months ago #309861 by Remy Hedrick
Are there any firmware cracks to the D7000 that will allow it to have a quicker burst rate? I mean what regulates the shutter speed, electronics right? So is there a way to speed the speed up? I thought I read that doubling the battery with a grip will increase FPS, so there must be a crack?


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10 years 5 months ago #309903 by garyrhook
No. It's a hardware problem as well. It takes a certain amount of time to move data around.

You want a higher FPS, buy a more powerful camera.


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10 years 5 months ago #309945 by cybersholt
I agree with gary but if you feel like possibly turning your d7000 into a paper weight you could always try and mess with the firmware as google puts it Here be dragons, http://www.digitaltrends.com/photography/camera-firmware-hacks/ & http://www.diyphotography.net/the-ultimate-custom-firmware-for-any-camera-roundup . I do not endorse or recommend doing any of this but it would be cool. :thumbsup:

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10 years 5 months ago #310105 by Vahrenkamp
You have one out of the box option, that's the battery grip. Other than that, it might be time for newer camera with higher FPS


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10 years 5 months ago #310341 by ThatNikonGuy
That would be great if that was the case, but then sales would be far less for some manufactures as people would be updating their cameras software and not spending money on new cameras


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10 years 5 months ago #310479 by Ian Stone

ThatNikonGuy wrote: That would be great if that was the case, but then sales would be far less for some manufactures as people would be updating their cameras software and not spending money on new cameras


What they could do at least is to increase the buffer


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10 years 5 months ago #310525 by garyrhook

Ian Stone wrote: What they could do at least is to increase the buffer


Yeah. I can get 9 (RAW) images in the buffer on my 16M Nikon. That's 500 MB of (reasonably fast) memory, and the faster memory is, the more expensive it is. Moving 16 MB out of a frame buffer in .2 seconds (give or take) requires a bandwidth of 80 MB/s. I don't think that's particularly snappy in this day and age, but I'm sure it's a point in their cost/benefit computations.


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10 years 5 months ago #310657 by anrique
It depend upon to Camera to Camera. Which Frame using, and direction is also important role here. Check-out all aspect of the photography.


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