![]() Nikon Z fc, Nikkor Z 16-50mm, Nikkor Z 40mm f/2, Nikkor Z 28mm f/2.8 (SE), Nikkor Z DX 18-140mm, Voigtlander 35mm f/1.2, Voigtlander 23mm f/1. Don't know how I would manage 17K pictures in 2 months. Of that I keep maybe 20% or less and discard the rest. I'm now much more selective when I'm out and about and shoot around half as much as I did before. When I first got into this I was taking over 2500 per months, but much of that was experimentation. When do you review them? How many do you discard? Do you do any post processing? I assume you're using high speed continuous a lot. Takes as many as you want, but I wonder how much time it takes to shoot and review, on average. Any thoughts? When you first got your DSLR or a New DSLR, How many Pictures did you take in the first few Months? Is that still too much? I know the Shutter last 100,000 + from what i read, But in 2 Months, 17k seems to be a lot. I'm not taking too much now, Id say roughly 1500 Pictures a Week. Is that too Much? It's my first DSLR in a While, So for the first Month, I was just trying to figure it out again, Taking as much pictures as i could to learn. In that time, I've taken around 17,000 Pictures (Video Shutter Also Included) According to Magic Lantern. #CANON SHUTTERCOUNT SOFTWARE#The only downside I heard being reported (and which is openly advertised on their website) is that the software gets falsely identified as being virus infected.I got my Camera almost exactly 2 Months ago. #CANON SHUTTERCOUNT FREE#I can confirm that this software is free and works to find shutter count on my Canon 80D. It's called Tornado SCF and can be used for many Canon and also Nikon models. However, recently I came across a different tool, which is completely free. Everywhere people told about the same tools, which either should be bought on a per camera base (EOSMsg) or only works on Apple. This may be a bit of an old topic, but it was quite present-day to me, as I recently required a used 80D. It had 3847 this morning when I checked it. The camera looked absolutely brand new, and I had 138 shots on the card, and eosmsg reported 138 shots. I bought an 80D as a refurb last summer, and checked it soon after receiving it when I had kept track of my shots still on the first card I put in it. So how accurate are the apps? I don't know since I don't care for myself about it.Įosmsg does in fact work for the 80D (and 5Ds for that matter which is another camera that's hard to find a count app for). It was different in all examples then the app provided. They asked for a shutter count to be included in the service. I don't know if it was the same app or not but I know of several folks that used shutter count apps to get the count and then sent the camera in to Canon for one reason or another. This link worked for me on a 5D3 I just bought. Salud.Ĭool, I didn't know ShutterCount ran on iPad too. A couple of years ago, the popular application. Once again the folks on FM forums come through. ShutterCount is Back for Canon DSLRs Will Nicholls Canon cameras are notoriously difficult to get accurate shutter actuation values from. Went bare bones, but hey, it delivered as promised. For another $4 I can get live view stats. Took me more than an hour, but I finally got the tablet and the app store and PayPal and the software and the camera all talking to each other. I'm probably wrong about all of that, but still, I passed.ĭug up an old IPad I had laying around and installed the ShutterCount app. It's from a Chinese company with a sketchy website that screams malware wrapper. I did a kill -9 on the idea of putting that on a computer connected to my network.Įosmsg is the only one built for Windows. ![]() Makes me believe that's pretty buggy software. One was for Linux only and the home page included instructions for identifying and killing runaway processes. I went through the list linked above and found three apps that claimed to pull the shutter count from Digic 6 and later processors. Show more →Įosmsg seems to be what you are searching for. Not that big a deal, but now it's a quest. They can't be the only ones who have figured this out. There's a "pro" version too (don't know makes it pro.). Bought it at the AppleStore a few years back for $2.99. ![]() ![]() The ShutterCount app work perfectly on my 80D: simply displays the shutter count without extra BS. ![]() Does anybody know if there's another way to get at that? I've read that the latest generation of Canon processors in pretty much all their cameras don't include that bit of information in that file. They just grep 'shutter count' in the exif data. All the web and software utilities do the same thing. Shutter count from this camera is no longer among them. Got a nasty utility off the web that dumps the raw exif data. I haven't been here for a while but I figured the Fred Miranda people might know. Can't find a definitive answer on the interwebs. ![]()
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