09-02-2017 08:44 PM
Thank you for all the posts. If I had read them first, I would not have bought such an unrealiable camera. It's the most expensive and the only unrealiable camera I've owned.
My camera shuts off while taking a movie - at anywhere between 2 and 6 minutes. Sometimes the movie is saved. Sometimes not.
The camera is about 2 years old - with high use for 2 weeks of vacation and almost no use after that. (My main camera is the Canon G10.) Short vacation clips worked using the new camera. Filming a wedding last month failed.
TRY A LONG MOVIE BEFORE YOUR CAMERA IS OUT OF WARRENTY.
At first, I could turn the camera off then on and power would come back. Now I must recharge the fully charged battery. A few seconds suffices.
A secondary complaint: The camera shutting off during a movie seems to be common. The Canon technical representative I talked to had never seen it before. (He was very thorough about talking me through many options and resetting the camera.) I will not be throwing good money after bad at the repair center.
Any hopeful suggestions always welcome.
Solved! Go to Solution.
09-03-2017 01:40 PM
09-11-2017 06:54 AM
A cheaper non canon battery will be good enough to test with, a lot of people use the 3rd party batteries all the time without trouble.
I have a similar problem with one of my old spare batteries in my 50D, it doesn't last as long as a newer one and I recharge it when the cameras battery icon starts flashing, but when I put it in the charger it takes about 10 seconds before the charger says it's full. I've never tried putting it straight back in the camera again and I usually leave it in the charger for about 4 hours before re-using it.. Probably time to throw it away.
09-03-2017 01:40 PM
Have you tried using a new battery ?
09-11-2017 02:28 AM
I wondered about the battery also, but don't have a spare.
The Canon rep seemed to think it was the camera and the battery is out of stock at Canon right now. Internet prices vary from $64 to $14. Since the instructions warn against a non-Canon battery, I don't know if a cheap one would be safe.
I will be visiting my sister who has the same battery next month and plan to try swapping.
Thanks for the feedback.
09-11-2017 05:59 AM
@nia wrote:I wondered about the battery also, but don't have a spare.
The Canon rep seemed to think it was the camera and the battery is out of stock at Canon right now. Internet prices vary from $64 to $14. Since the instructions warn against a non-Canon battery, I don't know if a cheap one would be safe.
I will be visiting my sister who has the same battery next month and plan to try swapping.
Thanks for the feedback.
As a test, try taking a video at a lower resolution setting. If it works without issue, then your memory card is the most likely culprit. It is not fast enough for the higher resolution recording modes.
09-11-2017 07:48 PM
Thank you. Yes, I've reduced the resolution, frame rate, and compression. I'm also using 3 different cards, with uploads of 20M, 50M, and 60M.
Another responder said that the cheap batteries were OK for testing, so I'm going to try that next.
09-11-2017 09:58 PM
@nia wrote:Thank you. Yes, I've reduced the resolution, frame rate, and compression. I'm also using 3 different cards, with uploads of 20M, 50M, and 60M.
Another responder said that the cheap batteries were OK for testing, so I'm going to try that next.
I think that was an oversimplification. House-brand batteries from reputable online stores are usually safe. Sometimes they're even a bit more powerful than their Canon equivalents. Really cheap batteries sold online are apt to be counterfeits or cheaply made knockoffs. They're the ones that can start fires.
09-11-2017 06:54 AM
A cheaper non canon battery will be good enough to test with, a lot of people use the 3rd party batteries all the time without trouble.
I have a similar problem with one of my old spare batteries in my 50D, it doesn't last as long as a newer one and I recharge it when the cameras battery icon starts flashing, but when I put it in the charger it takes about 10 seconds before the charger says it's full. I've never tried putting it straight back in the camera again and I usually leave it in the charger for about 4 hours before re-using it.. Probably time to throw it away.
09-11-2017 08:10 PM
Thank you. I'll order a cheap battery tonight.
The battery seems strong and reliable when taking stills. The battery was fully charged (like overnight) but stopped after a 2-3 minute movie. There was no message; the movie was not saved; the camera just turned off. The only way I found to restart the camera was to charge the battery - and a few seconds sufficed.
Our movies within the warrenty period were only 1-2 minutes, so this may have been a undetected manufacturing problem. I'll hope it's within the battery. I'll post again after trying a different battery.
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