Not sure if there is one for the D yet but I'd bet there is. Last I heard, there was no wired remote for the D90 either. I tried my Nikon and it worked fine. The battery on my clone is dead. If none of the tips so far have helped then I can heartily recommend the Yongnuo RF as a wireless shutter trigger. It functions for wireless flash use as well, but is dramatically superior to the IR remotes when used as a remote shutter release IME. A 1x receiver, 1x trigger, 1x shutter trigger cord set can be had for cheap on eBay.
A warming of several degrees, Melted ice and raised oceans and seas. The Army was finished, the Air Force diminished, but the Navy was quietly pleased. I had the camera menu setting for remote control set for 2s delay.
When I changed it to quick-response mode it started working. I haven't had time to play with the other setting and going back to 2s delay to see if they work. Frankly, I'm so disgusted with the way the camera handles I don't think I'll bother chasing down a bug. You buy a 3rd party IR remote to save a couple of bucks I mean, even the original is inexpensive and want to return a very expensive Nikon camera because the junk remote won't work?
Am I missing something here? My Nikon IR works great! Both from the front and the rear. Yeah, I kinda agree. A lot of us are on tight budgets, but the Nikon remote really is pretty inexpensive. I bought a wired remote from Gadget Infinity for my D80 years ago, it works great and was much cheaper than the Nikon model cord is a lot longer, too.
Total bargain. Nothing wrong with saving a few bucks on an IR remote, unless it doesn't work. I sure wouldn't toss the camera based on that, and don't think that was what the OP was suggesting. GMack seems to know what he's doing. If I get a chance tomorrow, I'll update the firmware. My D has the old firmware and the new firmware was just released yesterday. The genuine Nikon remote works with the old stuff for sure, and the new stuff is all hot-pixel related? Verifying the beam from the remote doesn't mean that its signal is compatible with the camera.
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It's more expensive than a normal remote shutter release, but that's because its primary purpose is that of a remote flash trigger. It has a secondary function that allows it to be used as a wired shutter release remote, and that piece of it that is hooked up to the camera can be remote controlled wirelessly by the other one. You will need to get a wireless remote control that uses the wired remote shutter control port on your D These require that you purchase both a transmitter and receiver.
According to the D brochure, the D does not have the infrared receiver that was built into many of the entry-level Nikon cameras in the past.
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