Quel fastidioso disturbo con quella musica di "merda" durante la concentrazione mentale per seguire una procedura così interessante e difficile poteva essere risparmiato !
All that just to shorten(tighten) the rubber dial? Clearly this is possible without literally opening up several cans of worms that can go wrong, from the obvious ripping the grip up to unsettling the countless weather seals. It's a shame Canon went to this cheap crap rubber dial material on even their higher end bodies, tempting it to fail. My '87 EOS 620 film camera's dial is a solid plastic composite that still works perfect & always had a more solid, tactile feel using it. No signs of deterioration whatsoever. My7D2 always had a spongy feel lacking that solid click of the 620 & has now failed.
Got this problem on mine. Will take it to service. Good to know how it's done.
Done! New dial. 60 bucks.
@@romanr.soroka1940 How?
You can do this exact same procedure without disassembly, pretty straight forward.
My 7d mk ii buttons don't work. Can anyone help how to get it to work or what parts i need to buy?
Don’t try this at home kids
Quel fastidioso disturbo con quella musica di "merda" durante la concentrazione mentale per seguire una procedura così interessante e difficile poteva essere risparmiato !
there is a mute button on youtube..
All that just to shorten(tighten) the rubber dial? Clearly this is possible without literally opening up several cans of worms that can go wrong, from the obvious ripping the grip up to unsettling the countless weather seals.
It's a shame Canon went to this cheap crap rubber dial material on even their higher end bodies, tempting it to fail. My '87 EOS 620 film camera's dial is a solid plastic composite that still works perfect & always had a more solid, tactile feel using it. No signs of deterioration whatsoever.
My7D2 always had a spongy feel lacking that solid click of the 620 & has now failed.