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Hi all,
My dad and I have had this same persistent issue with Lightroom for a few years now and would really love some additional suggestions. He's the photo enthusiast, I'm the computer guy, and neither of us can figure out what's going on. We have tried multiple card readers, multiple SD cards, using the camera as the card reader, multiple computers, multiple (demo) versions of Lightroom, and cannot seem to isolate any one bad factor. The memory and hard drive of the computer have been thoroughly tested, and I cannot get any other photo application to display similar behaviour. The only consistent factors seem to be the camera and Lightroom.
Photos are imported using Lightroom from the SD card or hard drive, then, as the histogram is generated, something in the post-import processing causes the colour channels to skew and the photos to display improperly. This happens using the "copy" import option with NEFs. JPEGs import fine, as do NEFs using the "copy as DNG" import option (most of the time), which is our workaround, but not a solution. Hoping for any suggestions any Adobe staff or enthusiasts might provide, as we're totally at a loss (and have been for four years)!
As of February 2017...
These are the JPEG and NEF versions of the same photo post-import. Notice the histogram:
This thread illustrates some of the steps that have been tried in more detail, though I almost want to get your opinions first without going too far down the troubleshooting rabbit hole! www.lightroomforums.net/threads/raw-files-imported-into-lightroom-coming-out-distorted-and-super-sat...
Kind regards,
Greg (and Bob) Stuart
Your second image is a corrupted file. Normally this is a hardware problem:
Bad board in the camera
failing memory card (very common)
bad card reader
broken USB cable on the card reader (very common)
bad sectors on the hard drive
If you transfer the images to the hard drive, not using LR, then do an "add" import in LR, does the problem still happen?
Does the latest version of Nikon View NX-i show the same problem?
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Your second image is a corrupted file. Normally this is a hardware problem:
Bad board in the camera
failing memory card (very common)
bad card reader
broken USB cable on the card reader (very common)
bad sectors on the hard drive
If you transfer the images to the hard drive, not using LR, then do an "add" import in LR, does the problem still happen?
Does the latest version of Nikon View NX-i show the same problem?
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I use a Nikon D7100, and I have never as yet experienced that problem. This is very probably a hardware problem with the camera or the cable or card reader. The image that you see on the camera LCD is an embedded JPEG preview. Your camera cannot display the raw image data. So it seems that your challenge is to identify where the hardware problem is. How are you downloading your images? Camera plugged into the computer or card reader?
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I think its a file corruption issue as well. Try this to see if its card slot on the camera or the camera itself. Tether the camera to Lightroom and snap off a few shots and see if the problem still exisits.
Also, if you just copy the raw files on the desktop then open in preview, is the issue still there?
Cheer
Jef
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Hi Joe, Jim, and Jeff! Thanks for your suggestions.
I have run every memory and drive diagnostic I know of and cannot find any issue there. Both of these components were upgraded and brand new when Lightroom was purchased in 2012. Since the issue persists, on some level, across multiple SD cards, multiple card readers (no USB cable involved), and on multiple computers, running the full version of LR 4 or demo versions of Lightroom 5 and CC, I would offer we're probably dealing with either something in the camera itself, a hardware issue in the USB interface specific to certain Macs, or a random hiccough in the import process triggered by....???
>>> Tether the camera to Lightroom and snap off a few shots and see if the problem still exists. <<<
Will have to hold off on this one. The camera is currently travelling the world. Was hoping to have a solution for my dad once he and his new photos return home, but I can try this in early April. I'm limited to testing with a few SD cards that are not on the trip.
>>> If you just copy the raw files on the desktop then open in preview, is the issue still there? <<<
No, the issue is triggered post-import when Lightroom generates the histogram. Images on the SD card open in Preview just fine too -- my main reason for suspecting it is not a camera issue. What is even weirder is that the images that show corruption after import in Lightroom are not always the same ones to show the issue when the very same files are opened in Preview.
>>> How are you downloading your images? Camera plugged into the computer or card reader? <<<
Primarily with a small cable-less card reader, however, connecting the camera directly did not make a difference, nor did swapping the card reader (tried four of them).
>>> If you transfer the images to the hard drive, not using LR, then do an "add" import in LR, does the problem still happen? <<<
It's not nearly as bad, but I was still able to find one in the "pre-copied using Image Transfer" batch that corrupted, yes. All others seemed fine.
>>> Does the latest version of Nikon View NX-i show the same problem? <<<
Yes, some of the images imported with Nikon Image Transfer to Nixon View NX-i look like this...
Copied in Finder, then viewed in View NX-i:
Copied with Nikon Image Transfer and viewed in View NX-i:
It's a slightly different look than what Lightroom produces, but basically the same issue. Of the whole batch, the Xs show the corrupt photos. A subsequent attempt resulted in only the last one corrupting. RANDOM!
This is an import attempt in Lightroom using the above files imported by Nikon Image Transfer (note the different subset of images that corrupted as compared to the Xs above) :
This is an import attempt in Lightroom from the SD card plugged into a USB card reader:
This is an import attempt in Lightroom from files on the hard drive, pre-copied using OS X's Image Capture from the SD card plugged into a USB card reader:
This is an import attempt in Lightroom from files on the hard drive, pre-copied using Finder from the SD card plugged into a USB card reader:
Really at a loss as to what causes the issue to varying degrees in some situations more than others!
Greg.
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Nikon Transfer is known to be problematic at times.
There are well known bugs where old versions of the software will corrupt new file formats from the newer camera models.
There is no need to use Nikon Transfer, but if you are going to do so, make sure it is up to date.
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ManiacJoe wrote
Nikon Transfer is known to be problematic at times.
There are well known bugs where old versions of the software will corrupt new file formats from the newer camera models.
There is no need to use Nikon Transfer, but if you are going to do so, make sure it is up to date.
No, this is not the cause of these problems. Nikon software may corrupt the file header so that Lightroom cannot read the file (you won't be able to import it into Lightroom), but Nikon software is not known to corrupt the image portion of the data, which is clearly what is happening.
The problem is a hardware malfunction, as others have explained.
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Yes, we have no need or desire to use Nikon Transfer, but were using it for testing purposes, as suggested.
Sooooo...what now? Is there any way anyone can help discern exactly which hardware component is the culprit?
Best,
Greg.
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This is explained above. It is a hardware malfunction. You need to try different hardware to see if you can isolate the bad component.
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The only consistent factors seem to be the camera and Lightroom.
So most likely is the camera!
Lightroom is 'seeing' some files with identical corruption in all import methods (in the screen-clips above)
We have tried multiple card readers, multiple SD cards,
again- must be the camera!
And I have suffered similar (random) corruption in a Canon camera, either dropped, or affected by extreme cold?
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Have you tried getting a different camera and importing those photos using the same equipment?
I'm just throwing it out there.
If someone doesn't have a camera, then take a card and go to the local camera store and snap a few shots on your card.
Its the best way I can figure to eliminate or confirm the issue is with the camera.