Getting your camera repaired
Another long-term reader and frequent-commenter had a question for us, and because I’m such a nice guy, I couldn’t let this one go, because I feel his pain: He has ruined his camera, and doesn’t know what to do next…
I’m facing having my camera repaired, and although its not a DSLR, its not a point-and-shoot either. Its a DimageZ2 and I think its good until I save up for a full DSLR. As you know Sony bought out Konica Minolta’s Digital imaging side so now I’d have to send it to them for repair and its not much less than I paid for it in the first place.
So in general is sending a unit back to the MFG for repair always the best? Are the other resources and are these places also willing to work on consumer cameras. An extra question: are they nice? I went to a a camera store to ask about repair and I didn’t leave with a good feeling
Ai, Stu, it seems as if you’ve got yourself a nasty pickle there, mate.
If your exhaust on your car breaks, you can generally replace it with an off-the-shelf solution, or if a window in your house gets broken, you have lots of choice for who repairs it.
Digital cameras are vastly different: They share very few parts, and the ones that are shared (imaging chips, card reader units, all that stuff) is generally soldered in, so they can’t easily be replaced. Even if you could replace, say, a card reader, the time it would take to un-solder the old unit and re-solder a new one would make the whole thing un-worth-while. Instead, the repairmen will replace the faulthy part and everything that is connected to it. In your case, you don’t mention what’s actually wrong with it (Electronic? Battery related? Mechanical?), but in the example of the card reader, you’re looking at a main board replacement. Generally, the manufacturers don’t make a lot more main boards than cameras (they make a few, in case of warranty faults), so if your main board breaks, you are basically shit out of luck.
That’s the way with all consumer electronics, unfortunately: If the remote control for your TV breaks, you might have to buy a new TV. If the screen on your mobile phone goes, you need a new mobile, and if your camera kicks the bucket - even if it’s a really small and nominally cheap part that breaks - it is generally not replacable, and you’re left without any camera.
There are very few manufacturers who actually offer repairs for compact digital cameras anymore. If anything goes wrong with your camera in the warranty time, they’ll send you a new one, because it isn’t economically feasible to get an engineer to fix it. Because there are so few people who deal with it, most manufacturers won’t have a distribution network for parts in place, and all borked cameras will get returned to the manufacturer, instead of distributing parts. This means that the only people who can actually do anything about a broken camera are the manufacturers themselves.
The case is much the same for dSLR cameras, in fact. Generally, they don’t break (although they might need a sensor clean or similar every now and again) but if they do, you’re out of luck, and the item has to be replaced. For cameras which are in abundant supply (such as the popular consumer cameras from Canon and Nikon), a number of spare parts are available, both off ’scrapped’ cameras and freshly produced parts destined for the repair industry. Professional dSLR cameras are a different matter altogether, because they are built for heavy abuse, and generally have more servicable parts (shutter mechanisms, mirror lock-up mechanisms, movable parts etc are all designed to be easily replaceable).
To answer your question - I wouldn’t hold in high hopes that anyone can put humpty dumpty back together again. Sorry. If I were you, I’d hurry up and put a d-SLR on your Christmas list…
Digg
Facebook
del.icio.us
Stumble Upon
#1 - December 18th, 2006 at 03:36
one of those modern conundrums–sink more than it’s worth to save a lost cause, or buy a new and better one at half the price you paid for that one and send the old one to the dump (environmental repercussions and all that)
technology such as a digital camera isn’t worth saving. it was old and obsolete the day you bought it (especially with a fixed lens) if it was an slr, at least you could salvage the lenses, but it’s a one-piece unit destined for the dump.
in all likelihood, you could buy one on ebay for a pittance, if it was actually worth it
#2 - December 18th, 2006 at 14:03
I’m really weary of Ebay, and I can’t find one for near what the reapr would be, except for overstock.com which I also don’t trust, they are sold out ATM. I think I’ll get it repaired only because I’m not ready for a full DSLR nor do I have the money… perhaps I should look at the higher dImageZ models…
On a side note I just dislike this, same thing with my digital reciever, same price ($200) to get it repaired but it was only $150 flat for my new reciever that has more features and more power :( if only it were the same for digital cameras.
Short rant—
Right now seems that the companies are pushing more megapixles and thats it. What good is a 7.1 mega pixel camera with the 3x zoom lense and everything is automatic? They give you no control over whats comming out but high resolution possibilities for high price. One of the reasons I loved my camera is that it had a high enough mega pixel count for some larger printers but the manual features of an SLR so I could choose, I could be artistic, not to mention its large quick lense and largish sensor. In short I’d like to pay $300 for a prosumer camera than $400 for a high mega pixel consumer P&S, however this nich market seems to get little attention.
Thanks for you article and reply.
Stu-
#3 - December 28th, 2006 at 21:31
Hm. I have a first generation Canon Digital Rebel that I have had repaired twice by Canon (they comped it the 2nd time), and it just went back to them for another repair. (So much for “generally they don’t break”!) I have written them a terse note on the matter; the original rig cost over $800 and I have purchased 3 lenses and a top-notch flash for it. That’s a lot of down time for a camer that is 2 1/2 years old.
And this is the problem in a nutshell. After such a large investment, do you continue to sink money into repairs? Do you switch brands and dump all the accessories at a major loss? The manufacturers have you over a barrel on this. It’s a bummer, but I’m not sure what you can do!