How To Setup The Canon R3 For FTP Transfer
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- Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
- BYU Photo's Jaren Wilkey walks photographers through the setup process so they can use wireless FTP transfer with the Canon EOS R3.
Wireless Workflow Blog Post: byuphoto.expos...
Wireless Workflow Video: • BYU Photo's Wireless W...
Step by Step PDF Instructions for Canon R3 FTP Transfer Setup: byuphotos.phot...
Video Shot and Edited by: Matt Norton/BYU Photo
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And I keep coming back every time I make new connections for ftp.
Thank you so much.
Awesome, you can also print out the pdf and keep it in your camera bag. Its nice to have the instruction handy.
This is such a great video! Thanks
Nice. Canon makes is so complicated to make transfers
Merci
Thank you good sir!
Very welcome!
Very vital info.. grt work
Much appreciated! Hopefully it was helpful.
Insane that you got Louis CK to do the voice over!
This was super helpful, thanks for posting. I was able to get connected to my iPhone’s hotspot no problem by following your tutorial. Do you know if there is a way to have the camera connect to a Wi-Fi network that requires a username and password? It isn’t a splash page-it’s a hidden network I’m trying to join where you have to specify the SSID and enter username and password in the settings.
Yes, you should be able to connect to a hidden network, you just need to manually enter the hidden network. When the select a network screen comes up, scroll to the bottom and choose manual settings, then enter the name of the hidden network.
Thanks for the reply. Yes, I found that option, but the network I’m trying to join requires a username to be configured in settings along with the password. On my iPhone I’m able to specify those details at the same time as specifying the hidden ssid. But on the R3 I haven’t found a way to put in a username in addition to the password.
Sorry for misunderstanding, I'm not sure you can put a username and a password, it might not be possible just like splash screens. Sometimes we work with our IT people on campus to setup a private network or our camera that doesn't require a username, hope that is an option for you.
@@alanpoizner9359
This is great, thank you. I have found and issue when connecting to my iPhone hotspot. The camera connects to the iPhone and I get a solid green light on the back of the camera and the iPhone shows a connected device but as soon as I try to transfer an image the camera loses connection to the iPhone, the transfer fails and the light on the back of the camera flashes green then red. Any ideas?
I'd suggest connecting to your local wifi vs phone hotspot to see if the problem is the hotspot.
Thanks for the great video. I have a question, is there a way to figure out which images you have sent, so that when downloading the card, these images have a mark or something? and then you can keep the RAWs, and ditch the rest. I know you can rate them, but I am looking for a different way, as to rate I need both hands, and two actions. Thanks again
The R3 had an update a while ago where it will tag or protect every image you send. Network Settings>Connection Option Settings>FTP Transfer Settings>Protect Images>Enable
Hope that helps!
@@byuphoto I have just checked, and it is perfect. You need to ingest both jpegs and Raws, but when selecting " tag" images in photomechanic , you can get Raws of the jpeg that you have sent, and keep them. It is a pitty that if you only ingest RAWs, they do not come with the tag. But anyway, it works, because at the end of everyday I can keep the RAWs of the "medium jpeg" that I have sent to my editor, just in case the client wants a HR version, and ditch all the others, saving lots of space on my back up. Thanks
Well done video! A power / workflow question though..I’m a sports photographer and shoot typically 1600 photos during an event. Ideally I’d like to set up the Comm, Function and Connection settings ahead of time, and upload a selected few at half time and after the game. However I don’t want to leave the camera’s network connection up all the time as that will drain the battery of both my camera and phone.
Can I set up the Comm, Function and Connection settings, then disable Network, and when I’m ready to transfer, just re-enable the Network setting? Or how about putting it in Airplane mode while not uploading, would that do the same thing?
Or would re-enabling Network on the camera require resetting the Comm, Function or Connection settings?
Thanks
Yes, you can have it all setup and then just disconnect and reconnect when you need it. Settings will stay in place.
Really interesting video however what would recommend to transfer huge volumes of data. I shoot between 1 and 2 terabytes of data per day and don’t have access to reliable WiFi. The cellphone hotspot is all well and good, but to transfer such huge amounts of dates and with enough speed before I have to switch cards for another location shoot doesn’t sound all that practical. Any thoughts?
Will this work with Lightroom?
You could setup an ftp server on your computer and then import that folder to lightroom.
When I transmit a photo to ftp the metadata is lost.
What site do you transmit the photo to? Are you using Photoshelter?
Great video! I’ve seen in other videos that you shoot football with raw and JPEG at the same time. You ftp the jpegs. With the r3 do you shoot raw and jpeg to the same card or separate cards? Do you find that this slows down your buffer (compared to just shooting raw) when shooting 18000 shots at a game?
We shoot RAW + Jpg to the same card, I've tested it and it makes no difference to have jpgs turned on or off, I usually get 234 CRAW frames before the buffer fills up.
@@byuphoto thanks Jaren. Appreciate the response.