06-30-2025 09:47 AM
I was shooting a wedding and half way through it I started receiving this error. I switched lenses and it continued, so I had to use my older camera. Please help!! What do I need to do?
06-30-2025 11:41 AM
What lenses are you using please provide the FULL NAME of ALL lenses being used. Saying “EF-S 18-55mm” IS NOT a complete name. Canon has made 9 different versions of that lens with the same focal length. I have example lenses below to help you identify your lens model below. Also are you using any accessories attached to your camera. If so what are they.
06-30-2025 11:58 AM
No accessories used.
06-30-2025 12:05 PM
Does the camera show an aperture set or does it say F/00 or F/—. If it does for some reason the camera and lens aren’t communicating. Do other lenses work properly on that camera. That lens utilizes an electronic focus ring so if the camera and lens can’t communicate manually focus doesn’t work either. All the focus ring is connected to is a digital encoder. When you turn the focus ring with the camera set to One Shot AF. The lens sends a signal to the camera which way you’re turning the focus ring. Then the camera sends a signal back to the lens to tell the AF motor to carry out manual focusing.
06-30-2025 12:17 PM
06-30-2025 12:25 PM
Set the aperture to a small number such as F/11 or F/16. Then press the depth of field preview button. The lens should stop down to the selected aperture. If Error 1 pops back up it’s a lens problem. By default the lens aperture stays open when focusing and composing your shot. It stops down before the picture is taken.
06-30-2025 12:37 PM
Awesome. It seems to be working now. Thanks so much!!
06-30-2025 12:41 PM
Note this is not a fix. You likely have a failing aperture motor, flex cable or sticky aperture blades that aren’t always stopping down. Newer cameras utilize faster communication speeds between the lens and camera. Older lenses with failing flex cables make work fine on an older. But on a new one it could cause problems.
06-30-2025 12:44 PM
This is the lens that came with the body, so they should be the same.
06-30-2025 01:38 PM
Not really it depends on the release date of the lens. Canon makes lenses in batches and when they sell out they make a new batch or just discontinue it. The EOS 90D was released after that lens. So even if a lens came new with the camera doesn’t mean the design is new. Canon often sells very old versions of kit lenses today with Rebel series cameras. Despite newer versions of it available.
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Speedlite EL-5 - Version 1.2.0
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RF70-200mm F2.8 L IS USM Z - Version 1.0.6
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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
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