NikonGear'23
Gear Talk => Other => Topic started by: PeterN on June 25, 2019, 17:22:34
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My apologies if this question has been addressed already but what is the best solution for importing photos on XQD card into an iPad?
Thanks for your help!
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I do import photo via cable from an XQD card reader
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I do import photo via cable from an XQD card reader
Importing to computer works that way but importing to an iPad?
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An option that works with my Z7 and the iPad Pro with USB-C connector is to connect both with the (Apple suppled supplied iPad Pro) USB-C charging cable; e.g. use the camera itself as an XQD reader.
(Regrettably connecting an iPad with Lightning connector to the Z7 by means of an Apple USB-C to Lightning cable does not work).
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An option that works with my Z7 and the iPad Pro with USB-C connector is to connect both with the (Apple suppled supplied iPad Pro) USB-C charging cable; e.g. use the camera itself as an XQD reader.
(Regrettably connecting an iPad with Lightning connector to the Z7 by means of an Apple USB-C to Lightning cable does not work).
Thank you. Call me stupid but could you share a photo? I may miss some hardware. I do have the Z6 USB cable and the lighting2usb charging cable for the iPad but I don’t have anything that cis ab
E to connect those 2.
However, I found that it is possible to establish a WiFi link between iPad and camera. Transferring one photo was easy. I don’t know about a transfer of 200 photos.
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From what I know you need a Lightning to USB 3 Camera Adapter (€39). Connect the XQD-cardreader to the USB3 port, a power cable to the USB-C port and the Lightning cable to the iPad. You can find instructions on YouTube.
I’m interested in this as well, but did not have/found the time to try it.
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I'm sorry I cannot provide any useful answer to solve your problem "right now", but I bought the latest third generation iPad Air a few days ago with the premise of the release of iPadOS13 this autumn, which will make the handling of the files as easy as on normal computers, PC or Mac.
On iPadOS13, you (we) should be able to connect a USB card reader via either the Lightning-USB Camera Adapter or a USB-C cable and import or export image files.
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Thank you. Call me stupid but could you share a photo? I may miss some hardware. I do have the Z6 USB cable and the lighting2usb charging cable for the iPad but I don’t have anything that cis ab
E to connect those 2.
However, I found that it is possible to establish a WiFi link between iPad and camera. Transferring one photo was easy. I don’t know about a transfer of 200 photos.
I think I got it: connect camera usb to the lightning-usb camera adapter.
Chris, Akira: thank you. I am curious what ios13 will bring!
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I think I got it: connect camera usb to the lightning-usb camera adapter.
Indeed, that is what works with an iPad with Lightning connector. (The last (third) generation of iPad Pro's have USB-C connectors, for those an USB-C to USB-C cable is enough).
As Akira mentions, with the forthcoming iPadOS update (later this year) importing pictures in an app like Lightroom will be much more convenient, no need to go through the camera roll anymore.
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I think I got it: connect camera usb to the lightning-usb camera adapter.
Chris, Akira: thank you. I am curious what ios13 will bring!
There will be no iOS 13 for the iPad, there will be iPadOS.
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I found this on youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QpR8AF7jiM
It is in German, but the video is almost self-explanatory. The presenter shows the various possibilities.
To summarize, there are 3 options:
1. Use the Apple Lightning to USB-C camera adapter (with power supply), connect a XQD-reader with the card and add a power supply.
2. Use the Apple Lightning to USB-C camera adapter and connect the camera to this adapter with a USB-cable. Switch on the camera first before connecting. This apparently works slowly
3. Use the standard Apple Lightning to USB-C adapter snd connect the camera to this adapter with a USB-cable. Switch on the camera first before connecting. This apparently works very fast
Tomorrow I will buy the L2USBc adapter to
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Importing to computer works that way but importing to an iPad?
it works as a USB drive on my Android phones... I hate Apple anyway, so if Apple blocks external USB my opinion will sure not change ...
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I think I found the solution that works best for me. I bought a lightning to USB camera Adapter (without power supply) and connect that to the USB-C cable supplied by Nikon with the camera. It is important to switch the camera on before connecting to the cable to the iPad. After connecting the photos show quickly in the Photos app. Importing works much faster than the other solution I tried: connect via WiFi and the Nikon App.
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One way which works very well is through CamRanger: camera and iPad then interact directly over WiFi so no connecting cables are needed.
I understand that iOS 13 allows the use of external HDs with an iPad but I haven't explored that.
Storage will become quite important if you want to shoot RAW and edit on an iPad.
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One way which works very well is through CamRanger: camera and iPad then interact directly over WiFi so no connecting cables are needed.
I understand that iOS 13 allows the use of external HDs with an iPad but I haven't explored that.
Storage will become quite important if you want to shoot RAW and edit on an iPad.
I do not know about camranger but it is possible to connect iPad and Z6/7 via WiFi but it is incredibly slow
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CamRanger generates its own WiFi and the connection between iPad and camera makes shutter-firing instantaneous.
I actually drive my camera from my iPad (by touch and using the CamRanger software installed on the iPad) when shooting from a tripod or during a shoot with a client. It means that I have a very large touch-screen and can see results instantly at full iPad size.
This is the walk-about remote shutter release which I put together:
Tap on the iPad to focus and to shoot: the attached flash was fired by radio from the camera and all other flash-heads are sychronized by radio.
I believe CamRanger works at more than 60 feet from the camera but I have not tested it at further distances than that.
(https://nikongear.net/revival/gallery/0/1358-280418035220-5541052.jpeg)
The image posted here is the actual one which you see being taken by the remote camera at the instant when the flash fired in this photo.
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Thank you very much, Ann.
I haven't thought about combining triggering the shutter and importing files yet so I will do that.