Boy, that was close!

Ambermile

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Arthur
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So, I just recently went over to Nikon because, for various reasons, grabbing a camera is getting harder for me and I wanted something that would bounce not break. Well, today, the D1x dropped out of the backpack, rolled around a bit and came to rest near a wall... :eek:


Carefully, I picked it up and looked around it. Nothing obviously damaged, the card had popped a bit so pressed it back and looked through the VF (at this point the front cap for the Sigma 18-50 was about 30 yards away). Oh oh, triple vision! No shutter firing and image was sort of squashed into three lines. Slightly worried I removed the lens - to see that the focusing screen had popped out of it's holder, and I never even knew they were replacable! Anyway, popped it back into the tray and up to the prism and all's working perfectly! One hell of a relief and can't help wondering if the Canon would have survived the same calamity - I think not but to be fair, that's why I went to Nikon and the Canons are stronger in other areas (like they are easier to use, faster so makes quick pics really a doddle, batteries last longer than it takes to fill a 1Gb card, etc.).

I am one relieved little picture taker I can tell you!


Arthur
 
Good bit of luck there! Go buy a lottery ticket quick :lol:
 
Recently there was a story in the press a Canon Rebel (400/500D) and kit lens surviving a 3000 ft fall after it parted company with a skydiver, fully intact and working! Its pretty amazing.

Heres the story with pics

http://www.fredmiranda.com/forum/topic/845602
 
When you drop a camera its like you heart stopped while its in mid air then beats 10x as fast as normal! Glad everything is ok.
 
I was out in Edinburgh last night and it was VERY slippy underfoot. I am amazed I didn't land on my arse or worse still, on my camera *** it was a close thing a few times.
 
That was close.
Nothing worse than seeing something that is potensionally so fragile falling and bouncing around.

Glad to hear it survived though.
 
At the risk of sounding patronising would a strap or some kid of lanyard be I order?
You should see the arrangement I have on it to stop it falling - with issues around the strength in my wrists/hands I just about tie it onto my arm when it's in use :lol:

However, as has been noted, it actually fell out of the backpack - one of those times when you realise too late that if a zip is partly closed, it's also partly open :( And yes, it did fall in slow motion, and the noise it made as it bounced seemd to echo for ages!

Arthur
 
I am thinking lucky is a bit of an understatement here! Yes, all that suffered was the lens hood popped off and spun away but it was the camera body that hit first... see what I mean about luck!

Arthur
 
:suspect:
I,d give it a few days of use before you count your chickens.... you never know whats been disturbed...
 
I've used it a few times now, with different lenses as well as the one that bounced and so far so good - fingers crossed for the long term though.

Here's the usual arrangement... I had one of those standard hand pad/grip things but still managed to drop the camera even then. Decided that since I was no longer able to ride the bike I would nick the helmet strap and do what you see in the pictures below. I still have the neckstrap as well, but also strap the camera to my hand... now I can completely forget about it - except when it's in the backpack that is...


grip1.jpg





grip2.jpg
 
I told you the D1X was built like a tank! I'm just glad it was that and not the 300D, I don't think that would've been happy..:)
 
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