Help with a Canon Digicam repair
Does anyone have any experience with repairs on a Canon camera? My A70 took a hard whack in Tahoe awhile ago. It's been acting funny ever since, and now I think it's totally dead.
Since I can buy a new one for about $280, I'm guessing that any repairs that Canon does will cost close enough to that to not make it worth geting it repaired.
Does anyone here have any experience with Canon repairs, or repairs of digital cameras in general?
Totally bummed. I love my camera :(
Re: Help with a Canon Digicam repair
Quote:
Originally posted by Twoplanker
Does anyone have any experience with repairs on a Canon camera? My A70 took a hard whack in Tahoe awhile ago. It's been acting funny ever since, and now I think it's totally dead.
Since I can buy a new one for about $280, I'm guessing that any repairs that Canon does will cost close enough to that to not make it worth geting it repaired.
Does anyone here have any experience with Canon repairs, or repairs of digital cameras in general?
Totally bummed. I love my camera :(
Have you taken it into a shop for a quote, 2P?
I feel quite responsible since I jumped off that rock with it in my hand to get a shot off you going off and it was messed up afterwards. So I'm down for contributing to a repair or a new cam.
Re: Re: Help with a Canon Digicam repair
Quote:
Originally posted by splat
Have you taken it into a shop for a quote, 2P?
I feel quite responsible since I jumped off that rock with it in my hand to get a shot off you going off and it was messed up afterwards. So I'm down for contributing to a repair or a new cam.
I talked with the manager/ camera expert at the shop where I bought it and he confirmed what I feared. Working on these things is so time intensive that most repairs quickly run up to $200. With a new camera costing only about $280 or so, the repair expense is probably not worth it. I called Canon and they were useless - "send it to us and we'll bill you, but it's not likely to be cheap."
Basically, the impression I got is that the technology in these things is so small and complicated, repairs are extremely time consuming and expensive.
So cool of you to offer to help with a new one. Shoot me an email about that. Once again, you've demonstrated that you are a standup Maggot. Anyone who says otherwise gets a swift kick in the nuts from me!
Re: Help with a Canon Digicam repair
Quote:
Originally posted by Twoplanker
Does anyone have any experience with repairs on a Canon camera? My A70 took a hard whack in Tahoe awhile ago. It's been acting funny ever since, and now I think it's totally dead.
Since I can buy a new one for about $280, I'm guessing that any repairs that Canon does will cost close enough to that to not make it worth geting it repaired.
Does anyone here have any experience with Canon repairs, or repairs of digital cameras in general?
Totally bummed. I love my camera :(
I've had mine back twice for warranty: once it just randomly died, and another time something in the lens mechanism got stuck and it wouldn't retract. Both times they fixed it for free. Of course I hadn't just dropped it on a rock...
You'd better send it back to Canon -- just go directly to factory service, don't go through a shop. Include a nice letter telling them you want to know how much it'll cost to get fixed and that they should call you to give you an estimate.
Odds are they'll just replace it and bill you for some random amount. Odds are also that this will be a lot less than a new camera would cost. Try it.
I've taken mine skiing many times, and it has never broken while/after siing. I keep it in a chest pocket...if I take a hard impact to the chest, I've got more problems than my camera.
If not in my jacket, it always lives in a padded case. Also you should put on the wrist strap.
That's the one problem with the A60/70/80...they're a bit delicate. The Elph or S series are burlier but cost a lot more.