Jazzsilver
New Member
Use the EOScount.com. Press F5 repeatedly till script run properly.
Try liao, still runtime error. Anyway, thanks for sharing.
Use the EOScount.com. Press F5 repeatedly till script run properly.
How do you know weather seal is affected ??? you work for canon ??? else dont assumeOnce you open up... there are chances the weather seal may be affected. .
Try liao, still runtime error. Anyway, thanks for sharing.
i mention chances... i did not assume is logic ... just like you open up a watch which is water proof ... some watch need to be re-certified that it is waterproof after the repair..... but both are precision item so my thinking lead me to this logic...
kollybie said:Once you open up... there are chances the weather seal may be affected. i dun wanna risk it and i dun think i will sell it away anytime soon. unless there is major fault than together fix it. if not i will not go to csc just to put tape in my 5dm3 lol.
Canon would have guidelines for the technician to follow to ensure weather seal is maintained. If they didn't, they would see lots of 5d3's (under warranty) being sent for repair due to faulty weather seal. Will cost them more in the long run. And if this had indeed happened in the past with older weather-sealed models, i'm sure Canon would have learned about this possibility by now, and changed their guidelines at the service centers accordingly.
As for whether the skill of the technician matters in ensuring weather seal, good engineering design means that the quality of the weather seal shouldn't depend on the skill of the technician. Even if it did, and this resulted in lots of faulty models sent back for repair of weather-seal, they would be able to trace serial numbers back to the technician who repaired them.
MechaEd said:All well and good but at the End of the day, I'm still the one stuck with the damaged camera. What good is it to me at the moment if they managed to track down who screwed it up? I doubt Canon would replace me with a new unit. They'd still just try to repair the heck out of it.
PS: someone please tell me Canon bodies are not consigned to shop, otherwise it opens up a new can of worms.
>_> if not happy just send it in.... but den ppl doubt the skill of the tech... omg... what do ppl wants?????? New camera??? Hiam this hiam that.
Regardless of consigned or sold to shops, Canon can still check the serial numbers. Anyway that's another topic altogether.
Coming back to the stocks at retailers, if they are really consigned, meaning there is a minute possibility of Canon taking back the stocks for rectification, in the event the stocks doesn't move due to the so called light leak issue? But they have also said there will be no recall.....
yeah, its a Friday, no mood to work.
Not planning to sell anytime soon. Anyway already bought the camera n enjoying it. If and when I sell my 5D3, I will be more interested in enjoying the replacement model than worrying about the effect of light leak issue on resale value.
Canon would have guidelines for the technician to follow to ensure weather seal is maintained. If they didn't, they would see lots of 5d3's (under warranty) being sent for repair due to faulty weather seal. Will cost them more in the long run. And if this had indeed happened in the past with older weather-sealed models, i'm sure Canon would have learned about this possibility by now, and changed their guidelines at the service centers accordingly.
As for whether the skill of the technician matters in ensuring weather seal, good engineering design means that the quality of the weather seal shouldn't depend on the skill of the technician. Even if it did, and this resulted in lots of faulty models sent back for repair of weather-seal, they would be able to trace serial numbers back to the technician who repaired them.