Photo-parts - tiny camera repair blog

Camera repairs

Teardowns or repairs of camera bodies

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    Nikon D750 - (just) an SD slot replacement
    The most ordinary type of repair - a true "walk-in job," as repair technicians like to say. Just replace a faulty memory card slot: minimal disassembly, a bit of soldering - and the camera is saved. However, even in such a simple repair, there are a few nuances that can easily turn fatal for the camera. Our patient: Nikon D750, which, even without a memory card inserted, shows the "err" message instead of the frame counter. The camera is unusable - the shutter is locked, even if you try to
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    Canon EOS RP - ERR 06, An Almost Repair Story
    How often have you thought about the "ultrasonic sensor cleaning” technology that’s present in almost every modern camera? Probably not very often — after all, its work is barely noticeable, if not downright invisible. The idea is simple: when the camera powers off, the outer glass of the sensor filter vibrates at high frequency, shaking off dust (in theory). In practice, this technology is far from a cure-all - micro-vibrations of the glass do little against heavily charged dust, sticky
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    When Weather Sealing Fails: Nikon D780 Water Damage Restoration
    By today's standards, the Nikon D780 is supposedly hopelessly outdated (of course not!), but I've never had a chance to look inside before. This model somehow got lost between the super-popular D750 and D850, and even spare parts for it were not eagerly sold. So when I was asked about the possibility of repairing one, I replied with great enthusiasm. The problem, as described by the owner, was also unusual: one not-so-fine day, the camera simply stopped taking pictures. Pressing the shutter
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    Canon EOS R10 Beyond Repair: How Canon’s Design Blocks Fixes After Minor Failures
    The title of this post can’t possibly capture the full extent of frustration that comes with repairing modern Canon cameras. We’ve got everything here: serious damage from minor water ingress, excessive reliance on proprietary ICs, and complete unavailability of component-level spare parts. Things are so bad that if you try to Google the part number of the faulty chip, you’ll find exactly this page, plus maybe one more - also from my own site. This Canon EOS R10 arrived with a
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    Canon 6D mark II - mysterious water damage failure (and teardown)
    The Canon 6D Mark II needs no introduction - an extremely popular full-frame camera for enthusiasts (in the past, at least). Somehow, I only got around to writing about its repair now - but better late than never. Today's patient arrived with the description: "dead as a dodo." I'm not quite sure what the owner meant by that, but the camera truly showed no signs of life. In this article: disassembly, interesting damage caused by an unknown liquid, and an unexpected culprit behind the failure.
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    Sony A7 Mark III – Saving it from the bin after water damage and clumsy hands
    I can accept "natural" damage without complaint. Water ate half the camera? Alright, it happens. A drop cracked the shell? Fair enough. But when some butterfingered “technician” makes things worse inside - I get furious. This camera arrived with the complaint: “the display doesn’t work, it reboots after language selection, and overall it’s not in great shape.” Turns out - even that was a lie. The camera was completely dead, zero reaction to the power lever. Let’s begin the