Good point NK. I forgot about the flash thing. Pretty annoying it can't work the same in all modes. It's not that hard to program. How about one of the wireless triggers? To answer my own question the 5D can't do this. However, I also have a Canon G9 and found out that it can perform this function in self-timer mode anywhere from one to ten photos can be taken with one push of the button. From my experience, the Canon timer will not in fact shoot three successive bracketed shots at each interval.
The only way I've found to make it fire a burst of shots at each interval is--counterintuitively--to set the camera to 2 sec timer. And as you would think, this prevents you from being able to have bracketed shots at an interval of less than two seconds.
Asked 6 years, 7 months ago. Active 6 years, 7 months ago. Viewed 91k times. Improve this question. O P O P 1 1 gold badge 1 1 silver badge 3 3 bronze badges. This is well described in the camera instruction manual.
Is there something in particular there that you don't understand or is not working for you? I've voted to close this as "unclear what you're asking".
The basic question is, of course, simple — but it's unclear what particular trouble you're having with something that seems straightforward on the face of it and at the very least easy to look up. Please help by providing further context. Add a comment. If a picture is being taken or an image is being processed when the next shot is scheduled on the interval timer, the shot set for that time will be skipped. The camera will thereby shoot fewer shots than the number set for interval timer shooting.
Auto power off operates with the interval timer. The power will automatically turn on approx. Do not point the camera toward an intense light source, such as the sun or an intense artificial light source. Live View shooting, movie shooting, or bulb exposures cannot be performed with interval timer. If a long exposure or shutter speed longer than the shooting interval is set, the camera cannot shoot at the set interval. Also, the number of shots may decrease when the shutter speed and the shooting interval are nearly the same.
If card recording time is longer than the set shooting interval, due to card performance or shooting settings, etc. Otherwise, if the interval is too short, the flash may not fire. If the shooting interval is too short, the camera may not take a picture or may capture an image without autofocusing. After interval timer shooting starts, you cannot use remote control shooting or remote-release shooting with an EOS-dedicated, external Speedlite.
If your eye will not remain on the viewfinder eyepiece during interval timer shooting, attach the eyepiece cover. If stray light enters the viewfinder when the picture is taken, it may throw off the exposure.
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