

- #SHUTTER COUNTER FOR CANON SOFTWARE#
- #SHUTTER COUNTER FOR CANON PLUS#
- #SHUTTER COUNTER FOR CANON FREE#
I used Tornado Shutter Count to retrieve the shutter counts for the 5D3 and 7D2 without issue.
#SHUTTER COUNTER FOR CANON SOFTWARE#
A body with a 250k count is obviously worth less than the same body with a 10k count if all other conditions are equal.
#SHUTTER COUNTER FOR CANON PLUS#
They are useful along with many other factors to go together in helping you determine the value of a used camera. Si vous possdez un appareil Canon, la tche sera un peu plus complique quavec un Nikon. If it really worries you, just get a mack warranty and be done with it.ĭon't get me wrong. My advice is to just get it and don't even worry yourself by doing a shutter count. But on the refurb you hopefully saved more than enough to cover the cost of a new shutter. They provide some details about the camera, including product Name.
#SHUTTER COUNTER FOR CANON FREE#
However, there are a few free tools that may help you to do this. Canon EOS 750D shutter rated lifespan is 100000 actuations.

There’s no official Canon based application to find the shutter count for an EOS DSLR. Canon cameras do not include a shutter count field in EXIF data, so EXIF based methods do not reveal shutter counts of Canon EOS cameras. The 750D was announced and released together with the 760D, a very similar model which adopts some of the ergonomic features of the more expensive 70D. On either you have the same likelihood of failure at any given point. Canon doesn’t have shutter count included on the EXIF information of an image file, as opposed to Nikon and Pentax. For Canon users, a company called AstroJargon has created two pieces of software for retrieving the shutter count information. If the shutter fails after the warranty period, your odds aren't going to be any higher and it won't fail any sooner really than if you started with a 0 count new body.

If the shutter fails in the warranty period, it gets replaced. If you get the same warranty that a new one gets, I wouldn't worry about it at all. The brand new zero click camera could fail at 10k clicks 1 day after the end of the warranty while your refurb at 5k clicks could run for 300k. And you have absolutely no way of knowing which one yours is going to be. If you have a body rated at 150k clicks, it just means that just as many fail before 150k clicks as they do after. The shutter life expectation is kind of misleading. Shutter counts can be from testing done while working on it. Even a 5000 count doesn't mean that is doesn't have a brand new shutter in it. The utility is for windows users, is free and will work on most recent Canon EOS Digital Cameras (models since 2010). I recently came across this issue (once again) when trying to unearth a free and easy way to get the shutter count for my war-torn Canon 7D, which has been battle tested on the front lines of wild fires, rowdy concerts, and breaking news scenes since I purchased it new in 2010. Shutter actuations don't tell you much of anything. Canon does not include shutter count information in.
