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R1 overheating in stills shooting

Cyrano
Contributor

I have two R1 bodies which I use for indoor theatrical work. I shoot stills only, and always in single-shot mode -- never video, and never continuous shooting. Averaged over several hours, my shooting rate is typically 1 shot per second. 

In such usage, both bodies routinely give overheating warnings. I frequently see 1 to 3 white bars; the most I've seen is 6 white bars. 

One body was sent to CPS. CPS replicated the problem and addressed it by replacing the main circuit board. The fix was not effective, as the problem still exists.

While neither body has ever shut down from overheating, this behavior is still a concern. Per page 338 of Canon's published EOS R1 Advanced User Guide, "The white [thermometer icon] icon indicates that the image quality of still photos will decline."

Similar overheating behavior has been reported by other users in other forums. Some key areas of discussion (and my personal technical opinions) are:

  • Whether the make and model of memory card matters. (It doesn't.)
  • Whether the behavior exists when the camera's Auto Power Off Temperature is at Standard. (It does.)
  • Whether the appearance of the overheating warning in stills shooting has any significance for stills shooting* (It does.)
    * One user reported that a CPS rep informed them that the overheating warning has no significance for stills shooting. The user was told that the significance of the warning is that if the user were to begin shooting video, the camera would be at risk of overheating. (This is contradicted by the EOS R1 Advanced User Guide, p. 338.)

I invite all members of this Community to share any experiences where their R1 body gave an overheating warning during undemanding stills shooting. 

Participation in this thread by Canon technical staff will be greatly appreciated. 

 

 

13 REPLIES 13

“ I have a pair of 1DX III bodies that use CFexpress cards and I have shot in all sorts of conditions including hours of baseball in direct sunlight when ambient is in the 90s and never an issue.  CFexpress cards aren't the issue. “ 

I tend to agree. He didn’t say which 1D body he was referring to, so I asked him if the same cards are being used. 

I also asked for a second time how many hours of continuous use, saving one photo each second, are we talking about.  I think that this is the issue. The demand is similar to recording video for hours on end. 

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"Enjoying photography since 1972."


@kvbarkley wrote:

"This is a definitive statement: not may or might or could, but will decline. "

This is from noise. If you have plenty of light, it is not an issue. Are your images too noisy?


I often photograph dancers moving quickly across a stage. To avoid motion blur, I must use a relatively high shutter speed. When the stage lighting is low, I'm forced to use very high ISOs, and must accept lots of noise. Fortunately, denoise software is now good enough make such files usable.

FWIW, I've not noticed any difference in noise between images taken before the overheating warning came on and images taken after the overheating warning came on. 

 

Cyrano
Contributor

Good news: After updating to firmware 1.0.2, I've done two theatrical shoots with no overheating warnings. 


@Waddizzle wrote:

How many hours?  That sounds like shooting conditions that could cause overheating, to me. It’s similar to video capture. You are writing almost continuously to the card.

I've seen this behavior after as little as 5 minutes.

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How many hours?  


I've seen this behavior after a total of 5 minutes of usage. From a cold start, I got only 5 minutes of shooting in before the warning was displayed. 

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