08-28-2013 04:28 PM
I just purchased a new Canon 70D...once I start recording, it records for a few seconds...small boxes appear on the upper right side of the display screen and then it shuts down and says "Movie recording has been stopped automatically"...is this due to a setting or something? I have been using a 7D for a number of years and this is a new issue for me...
11-29-2013 09:51 PM
Interesting. I'm not sure what that's about, and if there is such an issue, I think Canon would be hard-pressed to admit to it ontheir newest super-creation.
Personall, I record at 24 or 30 FPS in "All-I" low compression mode (I edit in Final Cut Pro, so I prefer to have as many "unique" individual frames as possible). This setup produces pretty large files, and your card has got to be able to handle all of that I/O pretty quickly.
After my last post a while back, I started experienceing the issue again, regardless of ISO. So I went and got a couple of San Disk Extreme Pro Class 10 95 MB/s SDHC cards, which would help determine once and for all that it was not a camera issue; I've had no further issues since I began using these cards.
11-29-2013 10:34 PM
UPDATE.......today i got a call from CANON, it seems that everyone is wrong in theri post about this problem, Canon will answer any calls to them, but will not admit anything a rep said. HERE IS THE PROBLEM WITH THE VIDEO AUTOMATICALLY STOPPING:
REP SAID...........IT IS DESIGNED TO STOP AFTER 4GB (INTERNATIONAL TRADE LAW ) SEPERATING CAMERA FROM CAMCORDERS. ANYTHING THAT RECORDS MORER THAN 59;59 (59 MINUTES AND 59 SECONDS VIOLATES THE TRADE LAW UNLESS THE COMPANY SAYS ITS A CAMCORDER.
Canon make the cameras top notch, but cannot go more than 59 min. or it violate the law. So i was told to get a remote and after the 1st hour, just push the record button again, as many times as i wanted in 1 hour segments providing i had the SD card that would store what i wanted. The SD card itself has nothing to do with the stopping, but the card must be able to record depending on the cameras specs. A class 10 is better for video, and the U series is even better on new models.
So after checking a few other brands, NIKON etc, i got the same story, international trade laws. ......go figure, why not just say it.
11-30-2013 12:49 AM
That's an intersting reasoning, but here's reality: I also use a 7D for shooting video, and it's never suffered from this malady. The 7D is NOT classified or sold as a "camcorder". The cards I've used for shooting videos with the 7D are only 8GB San Disk Extreme, 60 MB/s cards.
Most peole that had issues on this forum, seemed to have had them when shooting with the San Disk Ultra cards that came in various kits for the 70D. Extreme and Extreme Pro cards seem to work just fine. I can't talk about other brands of cards, because I haven't used any other brands.
Anyway, the fact of the matter is that I can shoot 10 seconds of video with a San Disk Ultra 32 GB card at the same setings (and I have done so already), and the 70D stops recording. I have since shot over 2 minutes straight of video--both stationary, and mobile--with the Extreme Pro cards (16 GB), and the camera doesn't stop recording.
The evidence is there that the speed of the card IS important, and no international trade laws come into play in hobbling the effective use of these cameras.
12-14-2013 12:42 AM
Found this thread when researching a similar problem. First shoot with the 70D was a friend's wedding last month. First time I hit record it stopped after about 2 seconds and told me that recording had been stopped automatically. I got really paranoid but hit record again and it went smoothly for over an hour (creating smaller mini files) without a problem.
Maybe once or twice since then I've had that issue. Always the first time I hit record on a shoot. Never again the same day. Just thought it was a weird bug with the camera.
I am using the Sony 64GB SDXC Class 10 UHS-1 R40 card, so it should be up to spec. We record in the ALL-I format at 24p.
Cut to tonight, filming a christmas concert with a buddy and his 5Dmk3. I have two of the Sony cards, identical, and we use one in his MK3 for a static wide shot since the MK3 can record seamlessly for over 30 minutes. He hit record on it and left it be while we manned two other cameras, the 70D being one of them. The first record for the 70D only shot for 5 seconds, and turns out the 5Dmk3 did too - with the same SD card. Halfway through we checked on the static MK3 and thought it had overheated and hit record again, until I looked at the footage and saw that it only gave us 5 seconds as well. All of the footage recorded after that was just fine.
My conclusion is that it is something with the SD cards not "speeding up" right away. Or something to that effect. After the initial stop, it does just fine. But it was interesting to see this happen in the 5Dmk3 as well.
12-16-2013 12:37 AM
I picked up a 70D shortly after release.
I have gotten this message twice now. It seems to stop after about 30 minutes each time. I am using a Sandisk Extreme 32GB 80MB/s U1 Class 10 card. This is extremely frustrating, as I have missed pieces of the Chirch Choir concert each time.
This card seems to be listed as the solution to this problem, but it is still occurring for me with this card. What now?
-Drew
12-16-2013 12:44 AM
12-16-2013 12:49 AM - edited 12-16-2013 12:50 AM
Wow! I wish I had known this before I bought the camera. This is very dissapointing.I was planning on using this to record my wife's choral concerts, and each half is usually 45 minutes.... I guess I'm back to my regular video camera for this
Any idea why they limit this, and if the limitation might be lifted?
and to answer your question, no, I have not had any problems with shorter clips.
-Drew
12-16-2013 12:55 AM
01-06-2014 06:09 PM
01-06-2014 06:55 PM
I had that problem - the issue is the write speed on your card and the size of the file that the highest quality uses. I tried a 32MBs card that didn't work for Full HD video. Then I bought these which work great! : Sandisk UHS-I SDXC card class 10
64GB, 95MB/s.
Read more at http://www.whatdigitalcamera.com/equipment/advice/517064/understanding-memory-cards.html#GMsRBLZDEri...
02/20/2025: New firmware updates are available.
RF70-200mm F2.8 L IS USM Z - Version 1.0.6
RF24-105mm F2.8 L IS USM Z - Version 1.0.9
RF100-300mm F2.8 L IS USM - Version 1.0.8
RF50mm F1.4 L VCM - Version 1.0.2
RF24mm F1.4 L VCM - Version 1.0.3
01/27/2025: New firmware updates are available.
12/18/2024: New firmware updates are available.
EOS C300 Mark III - Version 1..0.9.1
EOS C500 Mark II - Version 1.1.3.1
12/05/2024: New firmware updates are available.
EOS R5 Mark II - Version 1.0.2
09/26/2024: New firmware updates are available.
Canon U.S.A Inc. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction in whole or part without permission is prohibited.