01-03-2017 05:11 AM
hello all,
I'm new to this forum and i'm coming here because i couldnt find an answer to my question so far..
It's about my canon EOS 20D sensor cleaning, after a year without being used i've found some "artefacts" appeared on the pictures... I know there is a lot of stuff said, done and shown about it...But it's no dust.. i've ordered a cleaning kit from visible dust which came very complete with all the bells and whistles... but the "cracks" won't disappear..
Yes this looks like what i can only describe as "veins" or cracks.. like a mycosis..
I've took a picture for you to see.
Any input will be GREATLY appreciated since i'm in a state of .. despair right now i'd say. .
Thanks guys !
ps: forgive me if i made some mistakes, english is not my first language.
01-03-2017 10:53 PM
I happened to get to work on a 20D a few months ago. I'd never even seen one before.
A colleague at work brought in a 20D he'd bought when it was current, and his wife (so the story goes) immediately tried to jam a CF card in backwards and bent the pins. He had thrown it in a closet and basically forgotten about it. But after he'd been with us for a while and concluded that I knew something about cameras, he brought it in to see if I could fix it. The camera was in mint condition except for the bent pins, so I agreed to give it a try. Surprisingly, I was able to straighten the pins enough to get it working. It was one of those operations where you wish you had three hands: one for the flashlight, one for the magnifying glass, and one for the long-nose pliers. It took me a couple of hours, but I somehow managed to do it. The camera's owner was overjoyed; but whether it was actually worth the trouble, who can say?
01-04-2017 10:37 AM
There is a big difference between fixing old obsolete gear and paying cash money to do so. I have said many time all DSLR's take good pictures. This is true for the 20D but for the same amount of money a more current obsolete camera can be had. Removing or cleaning mold/fungus is one of the more expensive tasks. If every bit is not removed, it will just return.
But first it has to be looked at by a person that is familiar with servicing Canon cameras. Not by a bunch of guys guessing what might be wrong.
01-03-2017 10:43 AM
Fungus. Time to buy a newer camera.
01-03-2017 10:53 AM
@Peter wrote:Fungus. Time to buy a newer camera.
Not good. There's a fungus among us.
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