Sella174 said:
neuroanatomist said:
Yeah, my favorite from this thread was the expectation that a pro renting some gear should not have to calibrate it.
I do believe that specifically I wrote (bold added):
Sella174 said:
What will happen if such a professional photographer rents (or borrows) a lens at the last moment, but must now spend an hour first to calibrate the combination?
Obviously you've never had equipment croak on you at an event and then have some nice person loan you his "backup" gear. Or
vice versa.
Failing to plan is planning to fail. If a professional rents something at the last moment, not allowing time to test out the equipment before it's needed, said professional is not very competent. As for having something fail at an event and needing to borrow a replacement on the spot, again that's failing to plan and thus planning to fail. One should always have a backup – already tested and calibrated – for critical equipment needed to carry out the job properly.
I'm not a professional photographer, so I haven't had those issues in that context. I can say that as a scientist running time-critical experiments, I've had equipment failures over the years...but none of them have resulted in failed experiments, because I always ensure there is backup equipment available...pre-tested and calibrated so it can be immediately swapped in if needed. That's just proper planning...something done by good professionals in any field.
Sella174 said:
neuroanatomist said:
I guess rental houses are supposed to have the same calibration gear Canon should have, then have all rentals hand-delivered by white-glove couriers lest a careless UPS handler drop a box.
Personally, I fully expect a reputable rental company to check each and every lens for faults upon receiving it back. Would you be amicable if that super-great lens you rented arrives the afternoon before the big event and it cannot focus properly ... no matter how much you AFMA, huh?
Of course they should check it for proper operation before it's sent out. What you suggested is they they should somehow ensure that the gear they send me functions perfectly with my own gear with which I plan to use the rental(s), and that's beyond their control. For example, I once dropped my 5DII and while the camera was cosmetically and functionally okay after the fall, all of my AFMA values shifted 10 units negative. How is the rental company going to account for that?
As for it arriving the afternoon before the big event, I wouldn't be so foolish as to rent something and have it arrive the day before I needed it. Rather, I'd have it arrive with sufficient time to test it (even if it left the rental house in perfect condition, shipping damage can occur), and still have a replacement shipped out to arrive before the event, if needed. Failing to plan is planning to fail, remember?
Judging by your comments above, you are willing to accept or excuse a lack of proper planning (i.e., incompetence) by yourself or professionals you may choose to hire. It that works for you, fine...it doesn't work for me.
Sella174 said:
neuroanatomist said:
Ok, that's actually my second favorite. Top honors go to lower crime rates leading to zero insurance premiums.
Understandably my original statement was rather a difficult concept to grasp, seeing as it combines legal theory and social science, plus borrowing elements from psychology.
The concept was simple to grasp, the problem is your grasp on reality. Lower crime rates already lead to lower insurance premiums – localized crime rates, along with localized claim filing rates, are the major drivers for geographical variation in insurance premiums. You did suggest lower premiums, but also zero premiums. For-profit insurance companies giving free coverage? Completely unrealistic.
Also, coverage for photography gear (at least in the US) is rarely for theft only. Loss and unintentional damage are also covered by those policies, and low crime rates won't prevent people from dropping their gear.