03-17-2020 03:01 PM
I partially flooded my camera SL1 in an underwater housing. Immediately, took out the battery and left it to dry out for a few days. Installed fully charged battery. It's dead. Is there anything I can do to bring it back to life?
03-17-2020 03:32 PM
Probably not, it may come back to life if you leave it long enough but if it was flooded with seawater then it is almost certainly a write off because the salt causes a lot of corrosion which continues to form even after it dries out.
03-17-2020 03:41 PM
Thanks! I figured it was dead but thought I would ask first. I appreciate you taking the time to respond. Steve
03-17-2020 05:50 PM
Agree with Ray that if it was seawater it is a loss. The only approach if something is immersed in salt water is immediately flushing it with a large volume of fresh water and given your local water using distilled for this task ranges from advisable through mandatory. "Tap" water and well water (potentially worse after softening depending upon the method) can be nearly as bad as sea water.
When something gets soaked, immediately pull the battery and if the water is suspected of having a significant mineral content I would then flush with distilled water before drying. Adding even more water to a submerged camera body or lens may seem risky but once soaked additional water isn't going to do any additional damage and it will remove residue from the original less than pure water source.
Initial fast drying should be done with a gently heated air stream, a "space" heater works well for this phase. Followup by putting the device in a sealed bag with a desiccant, I really don't like using rice which isn't nearly as effective as the real thing and can create problems. I have some large desiccant packs that were used when storing military gear, many Pelican cases also come with similar packs and they are reusable by gently heating to drive the moisture out. The military units and better commercial packs are color coded and change color as the moisture content goes up. If your camera or lens gets really wet then drying will overwhelm even large desiccant packs so you will need at least two to cycle between.
All of this is a pain so avoidance is best. I restore vintage amateur radio gear and in a few cases I have given radio gear a complete bath (for example a pretty rare RCA commercial communications receiver from the mid 1930s I restored last year). It had been stored and mice had move in so it got a thorough outside bath with disinfectant while I wore a mask followed by multiple distilled water rinses (and I use deionized water when dealing with anything where it has insulation dealing with voltages over 1,000 volts). It then dried in the sun with forced air ventilation followed by hot air and finally desiccant. After a complete restoration it worked as well as it did brand new but it was a lot of work and had it not been rare I wouldn't have taken on the project.
In general, I wouldn't touch a camera or lens that required this level of work because even if returned to functionality its reliability is forever compromised (both mechanically and electronically) and even if you aren't a pro photographer you still don't want to be reliant upon something with a greatly increased chance of failure. A DSLR still has a complex shutter mechanism that relies upon proper lubricant in parts of that assembly which will be compromised by water so even if the electronics survive, the shutter mechanism is suspect and should be replaced. In many cases this will dictate that it is far better to replace the camera-the same reason that flood damaged vehicles are sold with salvage titles and are nearly worhtless on the open market excpet for their parts value.
Rodger
03-17-2020 08:17 PM
Hey Roger, thanks for the detailed help. All I can do is try to see it I can resurrect it with no expectations. Thanks again for taking the time to help. Steve
03-19-2020 12:11 PM
"...by putting the device in a sealed bag with a desiccant,..."
I don't recommend folks do this basically because they don't use or don't have enough of it. It takes a lot. Never use rice in a bag. The best way to try, and don't be shocked if your camera is a paper weight by now, is a warm heating pad. Open all doors or openings, no lens leave that open, no battery leave that open. No SD card and you guessed it, leave that open too. Sit the camera on the "warm" heating pad and leave it alone for a long time. Weeks maybe. Remember warm not hot heating pad.
You really have nothing to lose so give it a go. If it was saltwater, it is a paper weight.
03-19-2020 08:41 PM
Hey Rodger,
Great suggestion with the heating pad. Since it's a paperweight, I took the back off. Found where the water came in. Some corrosion on a connection. Cleaned it up and put it back in the dry bag. Can't hurt to try. Thanks for all your help. Steve
03-20-2020 12:22 AM - edited 03-20-2020 12:23 AM
@bamanorris wrote:Hey Rodger,
Great suggestion with the heating pad. Since it's a paperweight, I took the back off. Found where the water came in. Some corrosion on a connection. Cleaned it up and put it back in the dry bag. Can't hurt to try. Thanks for all your help. Steve
The corrosion is a red flag. If the original contaminant was salt water, you may want to wash the camera out with fresh water as Rodger suggested, even though it puts the drying process back to square one. Salt is hygroscopic (it's why people in humid climates put rice in salt shakers) and absorbs water from the atmosphere, which re-starts the corrosion process.
03-22-2020 07:02 PM
I have the camera in a dry bag. In a couple of weeks, I will test it and let you know the outcome. Not expecting much but it's worth the try. Steve
03-23-2020 09:12 AM
The problem is that now you can't trust it. Unless you can guarantee that all the minerals have been flushed out, it might come back in a few weeks, but could fail at any time.
That said, I have a macbook that got orangejuice spilled into it, and other than some occasional display glitches is still going strong years later.
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