Thanks. Unfortunately thats not always an option, specifically in rapidly changing conditions, such as the moonrise tonight.East Wind Photography said:Short response. NEVER change lenses at the beach. Wait until you are in your car or back in the room.
Send it back to Canon for cleaning. They will do the best they can, possibly taking the body down. Don't try to clean the mirror or sensor yourself.
East Wind Photography said:Short response. NEVER change lenses at the beach. Wait until you are in your car or back in the room.
Send it back to Canon for cleaning. They will do the best they can, possibly taking the body down. Don't try to clean the mirror or sensor yourself.
Pookie said:East Wind Photography said:Short response. NEVER change lenses at the beach. Wait until you are in your car or back in the room.
Send it back to Canon for cleaning. They will do the best they can, possibly taking the body down. Don't try to clean the mirror or sensor yourself.
As a wedding photographer this is ludicrous... even with multiple bodies you end up having to change lenses often, in all types of environments. It's par for the course. Sand in the camera happens, dust happens, the worst is salt water. ***Stuff*** happens, this can be fixed... this is what CPS is for.
East Wind Photography said:Pookie said:East Wind Photography said:Short response. NEVER change lenses at the beach. Wait until you are in your car or back in the room.
Send it back to Canon for cleaning. They will do the best they can, possibly taking the body down. Don't try to clean the mirror or sensor yourself.
As a wedding photographer this is ludicrous... even with multiple bodies you end up having to change lenses often, in all types of environments. It's par for the course. Sand in the camera happens, dust happens, the worst is salt water. ***Stuff*** happens, this can be fixed... this is what CPS is for.
It's not ludicrous, you just need to minimize your risk. Take two bodies, change lenses in your car, use a changing bag as mentioned below by another user.
Pookie said:East Wind Photography said:Pookie said:East Wind Photography said:Short response. NEVER change lenses at the beach. Wait until you are in your car or back in the room.
Send it back to Canon for cleaning. They will do the best they can, possibly taking the body down. Don't try to clean the mirror or sensor yourself.
As a wedding photographer this is ludicrous... even with multiple bodies you end up having to change lenses often, in all types of environments. It's par for the course. Sand in the camera happens, dust happens, the worst is salt water. ***Stuff*** happens, this can be fixed... this is what CPS is for.
It's not ludicrous, you just need to minimize your risk. Take two bodies, change lenses in your car, use a changing bag as mentioned below by another user.
You must have missed that multiple bodies part. Even with 3 bodies you'll end up changing outside... in business you don't have the luxury of saying to a client, "Hang on let me walk back to the car and change lenses, can you sit there for 20 in your wedding gown as I fiddle with my camera."
East Wind Photography said:Pookie said:East Wind Photography said:Pookie said:East Wind Photography said:Short response. NEVER change lenses at the beach. Wait until you are in your car or back in the room.
Send it back to Canon for cleaning. They will do the best they can, possibly taking the body down. Don't try to clean the mirror or sensor yourself.
As a wedding photographer this is ludicrous... even with multiple bodies you end up having to change lenses often, in all types of environments. It's par for the course. Sand in the camera happens, dust happens, the worst is salt water. ***Stuff*** happens, this can be fixed... this is what CPS is for.
It's not ludicrous, you just need to minimize your risk. Take two bodies, change lenses in your car, use a changing bag as mentioned below by another user.
You must have missed that multiple bodies part. Even with 3 bodies you'll end up changing outside... in business you don't have the luxury of saying to a client, "Hang on let me walk back to the car and change lenses, can you sit there for 20 in your wedding gown as I fiddle with my camera."
No, I agree there are times you just accept the risk but when it's not necessary then why take the chance? Especially with perhaps with a 6000.00 camera. A good option Canon has available is Carepak. I used it once for a catastrophic rain failure on a 5dsr and they covered it.
TeT said:They make changing bags... Patterson I think is one maker. Somebody makes a thing that looks like a popup light box for changing lenses in also...
East Wind Photography said:TeT said:They make changing bags... Patterson I think is one maker. Somebody makes a thing that looks like a popup light box for changing lenses in also...
It does seem pointless to purchase a light proof one for digital cameras. Would be easier to just use a clear plastic trash bag and maybe some rubber bands.
The concept is sound as long as it's not over engineered.![]()