After screw # 30, in the recycle bin it go's!! ten thousand screws of every shape and size. Just picked one of these up at Goodwill for $20.00, it looks like it went through 100 thousand days of wicked thrashing.. Ordered a charger and battery cheap if it works great if not Ebay parts or repair. Same place a 7D in better shape same price.. So far i haven't seen a soldering pencil used like on Nikon. You have mad skills much respect.
Hi. Does DSLR camera have any power sugre protection inside the body? I am just curious. For example, let's say I bought a new lens to my DSLR, but with damaged electronics. I put it to the body and .... the camera is damaged. It is possible?
Anything you connect to your camera that has electronic components that are damaged can potentially damage your camera. Cameras do not have any internal surge arrester or protector. While it’s more common to see a malfunction than actual damage (a malfunction will subside when the damaged lens or flash is replaced with something working properly), the natural of the damaged component will determine if the camera itself can be damaged. If you know something is damaged, don’t put it on your camera. If you didn’t know and it’s already been put on, replace the damaged lens or flash and troubleshoot to see if it works properly again.
In my case, the situation was that I did not use the lens to full frame, which is why there was a vignette on the side. For me, the problem was solved.
Everyone who does this type of work has their own way of “mapping”. They put difference screws in different places, which keeps them from being mixed up. You also get a sense of what types of screws do what type of job. They’re different sizes, thread types, coatings, etc. knowing what type of screw is used for different purposes makes it easier to keep them straight. Whether it’s a DSLR or a computer, the mapping process is essentially the same.
You can always put the screw back on their places, screwing them back once you remove the board. That helps not to lose them and you won't be able to put it back because there are your screws.. Easy. Yeah, takes longer but it ten times safer!
The short answer is “yes, it’s possible.” To elaborate, “shutter life” is determined by an average. The 650D/T4i has a shutter expectancy of 100,000 actuations. This is based off of a vast majority that die around this time, also considering outliers that last for 500,000 actuations or die after just 25 actuations. If yours died at 4000 and you are the first owner and have not abused the camera, contact Canon. They will warranty against defects, as which a shutter dying after 4000 shots qualifies.
After screw # 30, in the recycle bin it go's!!
ten thousand screws of every shape and size.
Just picked one of these up at Goodwill for $20.00, it looks like it went through 100 thousand days of wicked thrashing..
Ordered a charger and battery cheap if it works great if not Ebay parts or repair.
Same place a 7D in better shape same price..
So far i haven't seen a soldering pencil used like on Nikon.
You have mad skills much respect.
All I can "see how to" do is use you guys for repair work. This all looks way too complicated for the DIYer - you guys are skilled and fantastic.
Thank you :)
Same procedure is waiting me.. I am Engineer, and I do camera fixes casually, but I never reached this level of disassembly, so I feel the challenge
Hi. Does DSLR camera have any power sugre protection inside the body? I am just curious. For example, let's say I bought a new lens to my DSLR, but with damaged electronics. I put it to the body and .... the camera is damaged. It is possible?
Anything you connect to your camera that has electronic components that are damaged can potentially damage your camera. Cameras do not have any internal surge arrester or protector.
While it’s more common to see a malfunction than actual damage (a malfunction will subside when the damaged lens or flash is replaced with something working properly), the natural of the damaged component will determine if the camera itself can be damaged.
If you know something is damaged, don’t put it on your camera. If you didn’t know and it’s already been put on, replace the damaged lens or flash and troubleshoot to see if it works properly again.
Yes , they have in the Power supply!
hey i really enjoy your video but can be fix the shutter with out replace it?
hi, no, it is a loss of time :)
Is calibration necessary after such a procedure? I can't quite focus and there is some vignette on the edges
In my case, the situation was that I did not use the lens to full frame, which is why there was a vignette on the side. For me, the problem was solved.
Hi, you say the coils had no magnetic function... Seems like a weird failure point... Can you elaborate a bit please?
Send email to service@digi-service.eu with your questions and attached pictures and we will help you!
@@DIGISERVICEBGhelp my...
What a pro! how does he remember where each screw goes!!???
raykall thank you :) this is not the first body which I repair :)
raykall don’t forget to subscribe to our channel;)
Everyone who does this type of work has their own way of “mapping”. They put difference screws in different places, which keeps them from being mixed up.
You also get a sense of what types of screws do what type of job. They’re different sizes, thread types, coatings, etc. knowing what type of screw is used for different purposes makes it easier to keep them straight.
Whether it’s a DSLR or a computer, the mapping process is essentially the same.
You can always put the screw back on their places, screwing them back once you remove the board. That helps not to lose them and you won't be able to put it back because there are your screws.. Easy. Yeah, takes longer but it ten times safer!
OK, now I'm convinced to not buy that bargain on ebay with that error 😅
Help please have this problem on 650d, error 30, is it posible that I have this problem on only 4000 shutters?
Spiritwalkers Diary's hi, really personal. No need to search reason. :) Some can handle 100000 , other 1000....
@@DIGISERVICEBG Thanks and what is cost to change this?
Spiritwalkers Diary's more or less depends if the defective parts. Search in Ebay or send it to us ;)
The short answer is “yes, it’s possible.” To elaborate, “shutter life” is determined by an average. The 650D/T4i has a shutter expectancy of 100,000 actuations. This is based off of a vast majority that die around this time, also considering outliers that last for 500,000 actuations or die after just 25 actuations.
If yours died at 4000 and you are the first owner and have not abused the camera, contact Canon. They will warranty against defects, as which a shutter dying after 4000 shots qualifies.
BEST!
What is price sutter repairing
Hi, send email to service@digi-service.eu and we will give you an estimation. Thank you!
Most places in the USA will charge between $200-$400, dependent on the camera model and availability of parts.
Yeah, let me just do this at home....
No one advises that you disassemble your own DSLR if you are not an experienced DSLR/SLR technician.