I'm not so sure if that's really important if what you see is a camera that looks mostly unused. I see in the Marketplace Forum people posting photos of near-pristine cameras for sale and people always insist on getting the shutter count. Of course overall appearance factors into your decision, but given identical cosmetic condition you're most likely going to choose the one with the least mileage. Kind of like buying a used car and checking mileage. I guess there is some validity in inquiring about shutter count when purchasing a used body.
The camera is aimed at mid-market, semi-pro and enthusiast photographers. The camera can be purchased as a body-only, as kit with the 18-55mm IS STM lens at US1,049, with the new 18-135mm IS USM lens at US1,799 or with the EF-S 18-200mm IS at US1,899. Taking photos with a fancy camera does not make me a photographer.ĥD3 x2 | 16-35 L II | 50 L | 85 L II | 100 L | 135 L | 580 EX II x2 It has a body-only MSRP of US1199, which is the same as the Canon EOS 70D, which it replaces. What are your own opinions or actual experience with camera failure or luck with a body that won't stop ticking even after the expected shutter life. To add to this conversation, post anything about shutter actuations as you please. I think this is a fairly complete list of expected shutter cycles for the recent Canon bodies:Ĭanon EOS Digital Rebel T3i / 600D - 100,000Ĭanon EOS Digital Rebel T2i / 550D - 100,000Ĭanon EOS Digital Rebel T1i / 500D - 100,000Ĭanon EOS Digital Rebel XSi / 450D - 100,000Ĭanon EOS Digital Rebel XS / 1000D - 100,000Ĭanon EOS Digital Rebel XTi / 400D - 50,000Ĭanon EOS Digital Rebel XT / 350D - 50,000 I don't shoot like that anymore and, at weedings, I don't snap that many shots. I have shot a couple of 8 hour political events and walked away with +3,000 photos, but that was when I was trigger happy and it is an event that happens once a year. Is it possible to determine the shutter count from an image from a Canon camera If not, then is there some other item that is unique to. Files are not uploaded anywhere, as the application runs localy in your browser and.
Any photo editing software will damage this data. ONLY ORIGINAL JPG or ARW files STRAIGHT from the camera will work. I'm not a professional, so that's probably why. This tool will provide the number of shutter actuations that the camera has made up to the file in question. To kill a shutter in a year, based on what the shutter is rated, I'd have to shoot almost 3,000 photos a week or more than 400 a day. It's probably around 15,000 by now and I think it's a lot of hard work to snap that many photos. My camera's gone through its paces, but I don't know the shutter count. Are people just overly concerned about shutter actuations? What does knowing how many clicks a camera body has on it really mean? Is it just an illusion of security? Shutters can die just as suddenly at 5,000 clicks as it might at 50,000.