Previous threads on dead pixels are too old for replies it would seem. So here's a new one 
I have just bought an EOS 700d. Amazon delivered and all seemed well with the camera until I tried a long exposure. At 15 secs I get stuck/ dead pixel in a corner.
Amazon replaced the camera immediately. The replacement was worse. There is a cluster of dead pixels and several red and blue pixels. Amazon have again been very understanding and have dispatched a third body to me.
I called canon UK and they told me that they had no known issues with the 700d and that they were not prepared to listen to Internet forum talk of sensor issues. They would of corse repair the camera if it was faulty, under its warrantee. But the canon rep told me that the sensors have 99.99% effective pixels. Does this mean that canon would accept 1,800 defective pixels. If the rep meant 99.9999% then this would still mean 18 dead pixels.
The 3rd replacement will arrive tomorrow. If this is faulty, what should I do?
As I have yet to return any of the cameras, should I keep the best one and send it to canon for inspection/ repair? Should I accept bad pixels from new? My photos do include lots of long exposures, so accepting defects from new seems to be wrong. Am I being unrealistic?
Any help would be muchly appreciated )
I have just bought an EOS 700d. Amazon delivered and all seemed well with the camera until I tried a long exposure. At 15 secs I get stuck/ dead pixel in a corner.
Amazon replaced the camera immediately. The replacement was worse. There is a cluster of dead pixels and several red and blue pixels. Amazon have again been very understanding and have dispatched a third body to me.
I called canon UK and they told me that they had no known issues with the 700d and that they were not prepared to listen to Internet forum talk of sensor issues. They would of corse repair the camera if it was faulty, under its warrantee. But the canon rep told me that the sensors have 99.99% effective pixels. Does this mean that canon would accept 1,800 defective pixels. If the rep meant 99.9999% then this would still mean 18 dead pixels.
The 3rd replacement will arrive tomorrow. If this is faulty, what should I do?
As I have yet to return any of the cameras, should I keep the best one and send it to canon for inspection/ repair? Should I accept bad pixels from new? My photos do include lots of long exposures, so accepting defects from new seems to be wrong. Am I being unrealistic?
Any help would be muchly appreciated )