Canon 70D - DEAD SENSOR PIXELS! Im not happy :(

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So I got my Canon 70D yesterday, started my initial tests, learning many interesting things about it. Go through my ISO tests, upload images....every single image has this horizontal line on it. Camera is brand spanking new. Hopefully it is just a bad copy. I bought one for my Dad too, so looks like we will be swapping out tomorrow as I can't really do my tests with this camera.

Image is ISO 12800 & is promising, but I certainly hope no one else is seeing this:

http://www.michaelthemaven.com/?postID=2893&canon-70d-issue-dead-sensor-pixels
 

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Did you try remapping it? With a lens mounted and capped, or the body capped, initiate a manual sensor cleaning and let that run for 30 seconds or so, then power off then on and try again.

Edited: iPhone's Siri doesn't like the word 'capped'. :o
 
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Are my eyes that bad?
I honestly can't see the dead pixel…
I wonder if Canon is like mobile phone manufacturers where under 5 dead pixels is "acceptable" and they won't change..
Can anyone really tell 1 dead pixel out of a large photo? I personally can't..
 
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spinworkxroy said:
Are my eyes that bad?
I honestly can't see the dead pixel…
I wonder if Canon is like mobile phone manufacturers where under 5 dead pixels is "acceptable" and they won't change..
Can anyone really tell 1 dead pixel out of a large photo? I personally can't..

It's not one dead pixel, it's a whole line. The line amplifier that feeds the pixel array to the ADC is probably dead.
 
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I'd take it back if you are not happy.

I bought a 60d a few years ago which had a dead pixel on the sensor. I took a video (largely in a dark room) which showed the bright red dead pixel on the camera screen. Showed it to the store who then acknowledged it was faulty and gave me a new one.

I'd take it back and get a new one.

I don't know where you are based, but In the UK if you saw something is faulty, consumer law dictates they have to prove it isn't before they refuse a replacement or a refund (sales of goods act). I'm sure there must be something similar in america (is the lemon law a real thing?).

I never pay this kind of money for something that isn't perfect out the box. I bought a canon 135 f2 2 weeks ago that front focussed, had to go through 2 more copies to get a good one.
 
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Definitely a dud and has to be swapped. As an aside, I have to wonder what Canon's policy is on the number of working pixels is on a sensor coming down the line. When you have 20+ million, are each and every one on every sensor working perfectly? Off to google I go.
 
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I think this may be a major problem with this sensor. I had two on order and was going to cancel the second one after the first one arrived. The first one had a stuck red pixel, (or one and a cluster of a few), that showed up in every picture. I returned it. The second one arrived the day after and has at least one stuck red pixel. This is shooting in live view mode at ISO's 800 and 1600. I mainly bought this camera for bird shooting using live view and my 1.4 and 2x extenders on my 400mm 5.6 lens. It's focusing is great with this combination. I need to do some more shooting in better light to sort this out but it looks like a problem with the new sensor.

To see if your camera has this issue shoot at something with shadows or something small in the foreground with a darker out of focus background in RAW and then view at 100% and scan all sections of the frame. It shows up in Jpegs also but it is easier to find with the Raw image at 100% viewing. It will show up all the time but it is easier to spot in a darker picture that does not have a lot of detail.
 
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atodzia said:
I tried the pixel remapping suggested above and it fixed my red stuck pixel issue, looking at a few shots and a 3 minute movie. Thanks for that info.

In video, the red pixels are easier to identify by videotaping a dark scene (no black), and moving or panning the camera. Any stuck pixels will be obvious as they pass across the scene (the pixels don't move).

Did the remapping fix the red pixels in video? I am really curious because I have read that it doesn't work for video. I haven't run into the problem myself, but if I do I'm hoping this is a realistic fix.
 
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The red stuck pixel is back. I guess manual sensor cleaning will not get rid of it. Luckily, I got this camera at Amazon so I can order another and send this back when they get it back in stock or wait until the local BestBuy gets it in stock so it's easy to return if I get another one like this. I have a feeling it may be a common problem that people aren't seeing because of the subject matter or where the bad pixel(s) are located. It's been in a different place on the two cameras I have has.
 
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