Orangutan said:Mt Spokane Photography said:Canon, as do almost every camera and electronics manufacturer will not repair water damaged electronics, cameras, or lenses.
I'll trust your experience on this, but I still find it bizarre: supposedly, the bulk of the money is in grinding the glass precisely, and the remainder should be a replaceable shell. The shape of the glass will not be affected even by full immersion, so long as it's dealt with promptly. If it's not true that glass is the most expensive part of the finished product, then high-quality lenses are seriously overpriced.
All of the electronics, and any metal parts screws, motors, aperture, shell, etc are subject to corrosion. Obviously, some parts will not be damaged, and the glass will not likely be damaged. However. there will be dirt a sludge in the aperture and in every glass element, and taking those apart, replacing the electronics, aperture, and motor, will run up the bill. It costs a lot more to replace most of the parts in a lens and spend hours cleaning lens elements than a lens is worth. Customers also expect that the lens will be reliable and not fail after the repair. Unfortunately, failure is much more likely after water damage.
The factory has production line processes that do this efficiently, but not so for repair shops.
The lens may sell for a fair price just for the parts, but a reputable camera repair shop won't buy if the water damage is mentioned.
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