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D70's Shutter Lifetime...Hi everyone,
Can anyone tell me what the shutter life on the D70 is? I've heard stories of it lasting well over 100,000 actuations but I'm pretty sure Nikon's 'official' number is less than this? I've done a quick search but can't find any info. Thanks Paul http://www.australiandigitalphotography.com
Living in poverty due to my addiction to NIKON... Is there a clinic that can help me?
What ever it is, Dug will know, he's a machine! atleast he takes some bloody brilliant photos
Tim D70 - D200/MBD200 Coming soon - Too Much Gear, Not Enough Talent
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I knew someone dragged it over 100K. Birddog114
VNAF, My Beloved Country and Airspace
Volvo @ 1 Mil. Birddog114
VNAF, My Beloved Country and Airspace
As long as the driver wears a hat Photography, as a powerful medium of expression and communications, offers an infinite variety of perception, interpretation and execution. Ansel Adams
(misc Nikon stuff)
Can anyone tell me what happens once the sensor has reached it used by date, does that mean I have to buy a new camera, not feeling happy about this after paying all this money on the d200,, would have just bought a cheaper camera if i had know ,,,
Suzanne Nikon D200, 24-120mm VR, 70-300 ED, SB800 flash, Manfrotto tripod,
How do you or anyone know when the sensor has reached it used by date? Birddog114
VNAF, My Beloved Country and Airspace
The use by date is printed on the bottom of the box that your camera came in. It's difficult to see because it's printed in white ink against a white background. ... ... oh ... hang on ... ... ... someone is telling me that it's not April 1 today ... In that case, your sensor should be good for a long time. g.
Gary Stark Nikon, Canon, Bronica .... stuff The people who want English to be the official language of the United States are uncomfortable with their leaders being fluent in it - US Pres. Bartlet
Suzanne, it is not the sensor, hopefully that lasts for long time. Paul is asking about the shutter liftime. Being a mechanical component, that's the piece that get used up. You don't need a new camera when the shutter gives up, you just get it replaced. The D200 has been test to over 100,000. HTH, André Photography, as a powerful medium of expression and communications, offers an infinite variety of perception, interpretation and execution. Ansel Adams
(misc Nikon stuff)
Anybody know the price range to get the shutter replaced on the D70/D200? Pretty sure this is not covered on the warranty.
EDIT It cost 200.00 US Last edited by Actorlife on Fri Jun 16, 2006 1:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
It is covered in the warranty and even in the extended warranties.
That was specifically the reason I bought my extended warranty. Producer & Editor @ GadgetGuy.com.au
Contributor for fine magazines such as PC Authority and Popular Science.
Cost to replace D70 shutter ~$AU290 by Maxwell (as at July 2005).
Mine lasted barely 15,000 actuations. 14,497 to be precise. But as with motor cars, it's how harsh those kms/actuations were added, not the precise number itself. My D70 had a very harsh upbringing with someone who exposed it to environmental extremes regularly, tested its non-existent weather sealing, etc. and it rewarded me with many fantastic images and priceless memories; so <$300 wasn't alot to get it "serviced".
Im afraid that soon enough it will be my turn
Someone once said to me ”think positively and you will find a car parking spot”
In this case stop thinking about something failing and think positively Chris
-------------------------------- I started my life with nothing and I’ve still got most of it left
I was at a grey sellers yesterday and he has some literature that lists the D80 and D70/s at 50,000 and the D200 at 100,000.
However, I didn't get to see that literature so I don't know its provenance.
Can anyone tell me how I can tell how many "impressions" it has done? - I have been shooting with my D70s as a motion device because of the tonal quality - kind of sacrificing the shutter for the art... I must have clocked up at least 50.
The program Opanda Exif is your friend
http://www.opanda.com/en/iexif/index.html Download the free program and open up your latest jpeg file in Opanda. Among the exif data will be the number of "impressions" the shutter has gone through.
is it true that the shutter mechanism has to be serviced every so often?
one of my mates commented that my shutter was rather loud for a D70 so thats got me worried.. personally i dont notice. sounds better than a 350D shutter anyway except shooting during a flute performance is a pain hahaha -julz
This is indeed the conventional wisdom on the subject - however, any failure data like this has a distribution. I've heard of D70 shutters going for 120,000 odd, and as you can see earlier in this thread, only 15,000. Cheers What's another word for "thesaurus"?
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