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Loswr
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Re: EOS 5D Mark III & Third Party Batteries
Read the post above yours, see if anything sinks in. Here, I'll quote the relevant bit:
Say you're on vacation with your two cheap, chipped batteries and your Canon charger, and on the first day out those batteries decide to stop charging in your charger (which you likely wouldn't notice until that night, when you needed to charge them). Have a new pair FedEx'd to you at the Ngorongoro Crater Lodge? The package absolutely, positively won't be there overnight...not to mention the high cost of getting bona fide LP-E6s shipped there at all.
Maybe you wouldn't care if you missed hundreds of shots on a once-in-a-lifetime vacation. I suspect most people would consider that a significant risk - it seems quite reasonable to fear such an occurrence, be uncertain about the possibility, and thus doubt the wisdom of saving a few dollars on a cheaper 3rd party battery.
Marsu42 said:neuroanatomist said:I know that 'every little bit counts' but saving somewhere between 1-4% of the cost of the camera is probably not worth the risk for most people. Granted, if you're buying 4+ batteries, it adds up. But if you're buying that many batteries, you probably need reliability.
Apart from me being Mr. Budget - what risk? Am I missing something here, or has the Canon fud finally sunk in? I'd evaluate the risk of a chipped (i.e. premium) 3rd party battery to turn into an explosive device just as with Canon, that's about zero. The one possibility I see is that it might have less charge or less load cycles, alas, it's cheaper.
Read the post above yours, see if anything sinks in. Here, I'll quote the relevant bit:
dgatwood said:And just a day after I posted that, the second one of my cheap third-party batteries stopped communicating with the camera and won't charge with the Canon charger. So I've confirmed that if the chip doesn't work with the camera, the charger just rolls its eyes.
Say you're on vacation with your two cheap, chipped batteries and your Canon charger, and on the first day out those batteries decide to stop charging in your charger (which you likely wouldn't notice until that night, when you needed to charge them). Have a new pair FedEx'd to you at the Ngorongoro Crater Lodge? The package absolutely, positively won't be there overnight...not to mention the high cost of getting bona fide LP-E6s shipped there at all.
Maybe you wouldn't care if you missed hundreds of shots on a once-in-a-lifetime vacation. I suspect most people would consider that a significant risk - it seems quite reasonable to fear such an occurrence, be uncertain about the possibility, and thus doubt the wisdom of saving a few dollars on a cheaper 3rd party battery.
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