01-06-2018 10:19 AM
01-06-2018 10:37 AM - edited 01-06-2018 10:37 AM
What exactly is a “mark iii”? Is that a 5D series camera? There have been 1D cameras designated as “mark iii”, too.
Depending upon your intended use, I would be less concerned about the shutter count, than the overall health of the camera body itself. If a shutter decides to fail, it will fail whenever it gets good and ready. There won’t be anything you can do to prevent it, short of having a new shutter installed, which puts you right back where you started.
How many shots per week, month, or year do you expect to take? If you average taking 200 shots per week, that is still only 10,000 per year. A camera with 140,000 shots may fail soon, or it may not. There is no way to know. Be more concerned about the state of the lens mount, the battery and memory card compartments.
Does the camera even work properly? It is clean on the inside, or is it dirty and moldy? Etc.
01-06-2018 11:00 AM
01-06-2018 11:06 AM
@Gjsantoni wrote:
Thank you waddizzle, is a canon 5D Mark iii two years old, so have been used heavily.
I’ll be using it for hobbie so I do not intend use it heavily.
It looks in very well shape, body only, clean, have been used by a pro.
Some pros can really use their gear pretty hard. If you can do hands-on test drive, then do so.
If there is no battery charger in the deal, then I would negotiate the asking price downward. A charger is not cheap. Take $200 off of the asking price. The battery is probably old, too, and needs replacing. A battery’s life expectancy is also a function of how many charging cycles it has been through. With a high shutter count, it is possible the battery has seen a high number of charging cycles.
01-06-2018 12:24 PM
@Waddizzle wrote:
@Gjsantoni wrote:
Thank you waddizzle, is a canon 5D Mark iii two years old, so have been used heavily.
I’ll be using it for hobbie so I do not intend use it heavily.
It looks in very well shape, body only, clean, have been used by a pro.Some pros can really use their gear pretty hard. If you can do hands-on test drive, then do so.
If there is no battery charger in the deal, then I would negotiate the asking price downward. A charger is not cheap. Take $200 off of the asking price. The battery is probably old, too, and needs replacing. A battery’s life expectancy is also a function of how many charging cycles it has been through. With a high shutter count, it is possible the battery has seen a high number of charging cycles.
Actually, a Canon LC-E6 charger costs $53 new at that big NYC store.
01-06-2018 12:46 PM
@RobertTheFat wrote:
Actually, a Canon LC-E6 charger costs $53 new at that big NYC store.
I am adding in the cost of a battery, or two. I am also driving a hard bargain.
01-06-2018 12:03 PM
01-06-2018 12:53 PM
Well according to Canon that 5d3 is about done. It's rated at 150,000 but I know of some 5d3's that are well over a million and still working. Replacing a shutter is not big deal if CPS still services the model you are considering. It is around $350 bucks.
I would say $1100 is a fair price for that camera. So for around $1500 you could have a virtually new camera if you had to replace the shutter. That's not bad.
The thing any more is the high speed shooting people do. Like a 1Dx Mk II can rip of 14 fps for instance. This causes the shutter count to sky rocket.
01-06-2018 01:08 PM
01-06-2018 01:11 PM
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.
EOS R6 Mark II - Version 1.5.0
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