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D3300 shutter count
D3300 shutter count




d3300 shutter count
  1. D3300 shutter count professional#
  2. D3300 shutter count series#

Source: AS this shows, the results for the cheaper models are becoming very respectable, either the quality of manufacture is getting better or more testing is leading to less conservative estimates (I suspect the latter).

  • Canon EOS Digital Rebel XT / 350D 50,000.
  • Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi / 400D 50,000.
  • Canon EOS Digital Rebel XSi / 450D 100,000.
  • Canon EOS Digital Rebel T1i / 500D 100,000.
  • Canon EOS Digital Rebel XS / 1000D 100,000.
  • First you get black frames when shooting 1/4000, then at 1/1000, then it gives up.Ĭanon DSLR manufacturer stated shutter life expectancies: Having owned SLRs that have had shutters fail from overuse, the first thing to go is the high speeds. Battery wear is probably most significant. This assumes it has a shutter.many P&S cameras use electronic shutters.ĭifferent camera shutters are rated for different numbers of actuations as you state so that should influence how many is too many.Īlso actuations will roughly correlate with how well used the camera is, so that might indicate wear or the mount / body / battery. I can't say for P&S cams, though, but I would say that a shutter rating of 5000 is not going to go very far at all, and something along the lines of 20,000 actuations would be more reasonable. When it comes to most DSLR's, I think the lowest shutter rating is 100,000, so generally its not a problem. I expect this body to last me at least a few years, and if it only had a rating of 20,000 shutter actuations, it would probably be done by the end of this year. I burned through 5000 shots in the first two months with it, and have over 10,000 shots on it so far. I bought my first camera ever, a Canon Rebel XSi (450D) about 18 months ago. If you are looking into buying a camera with a lower shutter rating, say 20,000, make sure that you understand how you intend to use it. At worst, you may continually activate a shutter for a couple hours at a time, after which the camera is stored until its next use.

    D3300 shutter count series#

    the ones used in a Canon EOS-1Ds MkIII series body) is not only manufactured to a higher spec, but tested by continually activating a sample until the shutter fails. A shutter rated for 300,000 actuations (i.e.

    D3300 shutter count professional#

    On the other hand, if you put a highe end professional camera through more mild use and take extremely good care of your gear, the shutter could last considerably longer than its rating. If you put an entry-level DSLR through professional-grade usage, with continuous burst shots of sports or wildlife action in rugged, dirty, or moist environments, then you could quite likely get consistently less use out of a shutter than its rated at. Your personal experience with shutter lifetime may be dependent upon how you use it. I guess this alleviates legal pressure from those who like to sue over petty things, and gives more weight to the rating. Second, statistical ratings like MTBF or shutter actuation counts tend to be pessimistic, rather than optimistic. While there are always flukes in any set of statistics, and you may end up with a shutter that lasts half as long or twice as long as its rated lifetime, generally speaking they should last for as long as they are rated. First off, they are computed to be statistically accurate. You should take a shutter actuation rating at face value. A shutter rated for 300,000 actuations came from a particularly good batch, or a batch manufactured with more stringent specifications. A shutter rated for 100,000 actuations came from a batch that failed at around 100,000 actuations during testing, which is a pretty average number for most entry and mid level DSLR cameras. A high number of shutter samples from a batch are tested in continuous tests until they fail, and the average failure rate from the whole set of sample shutters is computed. Shutter actuation counts are computed in the same way. Instead, they perform an accelerated test on a high sample count of hard drives by putting them under high stress, and compute an average, statistically useful MTBF based on the failure times of all the drives in the test. If a company tried to, they would spend some 11 years testing out hard drives that needed to have an MTBF of 100,000 hours. It is impossible, practically speaking, to physically test a hard drive under normal usage until it physically dies enough times to actually get statistically useful results. Shutter actuation counts are computed in a similar way to hard drive "mean time before failure" ratings.






    D3300 shutter count