Every "T" model after T4 is not supported, with the lone exception of the T5i model that is supported, but not the T6i and beyond.Ĭanon did something to makes the end user's job that much harder when we go and sell our older equipment. The "readme" file gives that info and states the windows program supports the T4 and T3 models. That said, if you don't post the shutter count on Ebay, bidders will knock you for it.Īgain and unfortunately, the Rebel T5 (1200D) is not listed as a supported camera using the Shutter Count program listed on Learning website. Every single one of those knocks translates into the shutter mechanism (mainly) taking a small jolt. I've seen a 50D die (at someone elses hands) at 130k because it had had a hard life in NYC with a journalist. The biggest issue is the condition of the camera. Sitting here with me is the my soon to be retired 7D on 350-400k. I've have a working Rebel XTi here with 300k on the clock, still going fine (although does sound a bit worn out), I've broken a 50D at the 500k mark, and if I hadn't have dropped a 7D last year which I reckoned shortened it's life considerably, it would have seen 1m as opposed to 840k when it died. I don't believe any digital Canon has, and if they have, we are talking before the 300D. Putting the data in exif was largely a Nikon thing iirc.Īs an aside, shutter count is fairly meaningless. Some camera companies write the shutter count to the EXIF data for some or all of their cameras.
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