By virtue of the fact that you are asking this question, I must assume that you are not a qualified camera repair man. Unfortunately, the problem you described is not something you should attempt to repair yourself. It is very likely that your camera has multiple problems. It will cost you less to either send it to Nikon's repair depot or to a camera repair man. If you try to repair it yourself, there is a good chance you will only succeed in doing more damage and increasing your repair cost.
SOURCE: faulty nikon d40
I removed my lens and put it back on making sure that the aperture ring was set properly, that did it. The second time, I locked the aperture ring back in to its proper place and it worked fine.
SOURCE: NIkon coolpix L18 horizontal lines appear after taking picture
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SOURCE: Pictures too dark. Shutter operating too slowly.
Are you in auto mode? If it is manual then it is possible that the settings are not correct for the light. You can look at the meter to see what the camera thinks about the exposure.
It sounds as if your subject is too dark. Does this happen when the area is brightly lit? Does the flash fire?
SOURCE: how to remove the battery from nikon d3000
the little trap door on the bottom houses both the memory card and the battery. you have to push the battery slightly to release it. i fond the easiest way at that point is to tip the camera and the battery usually slides right out.
SOURCE: My nikon d3000 has suddenly
You're seeing blown-out highlights. Those are the portions of your photos which have been overexposed so much that all details have been lost and gone pure white. Of course, the camera doesn't know whether you were going for that effect and the blinking is only a warning. Blown-out highlights are generally considered a bad thing, and the correct remedy is to reduce exposure to bring up the details. This risks losing details in the dark areas and the shadows, but this is not considered as bad. After all, we don't expect to see things in the dark.
That was the long answer. The short answer is, repeatedly press up/down on the multiselector to cycle through the different views of your photo until you find one you like.
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Thank you all for you suggestions. I figured out my problem. When the camera dropped it broke my flash. Once I turned my flash off it took regular pictures again.
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