

I don't buy service contracts for the same reason. It detracts from the history and it is NOT A RECOVERABLE expense.

I don't do Major Repairs, either on cars or cameras. I drive high mileage cars because they are cheaper. It went 234,000 shutter count and still working when I sold it. I had a Fujifilm GA645Zi film Medium Format Camera when Fuji used to suggest service at 5000 shutter actuations.

It went 284,000 actuations and still working well when I sold it. built on the Nikon D200 chassis was rated for 100K actuations. Also tested X-Pro3 on loan from FUJIFILM Australia.My Fuji S5 Pro. Upload your JPEG and the site will analyse the metadata embedded with (also known as EXIF) and display the shutter countĬheck out my video below where I demonstrate some of the cameras I’ve owned, and I have owned a few – X-T1, X-T2, X-T3, X-T4 and X100v.Navigate to this website and locate the Shutter Count Finder page.Download the JPEG to your computer, smartphone or tablet.To find out the shutter count the process is quite easy. You won’t find it in the RAW/RAF file if you don’t shoot JPEG. The Shutter count is actually embedded in the JPEG that the camera will produce. My X100v does have a menu but none of my X-Tx cameras did, nor did the X-Pro3 that I tried. The tricky thing with FUJIFILM cameras is that many don’t show the Shutter count in any of the Menus. Most camera’s have a limited life rated by the manufacturer for the shutter, however majority of us will change cameras, upgrade etc before reaching this limit. Shutter count is often also known as shutter actuations which means the up and down movement of the camera’s shutter as it takes a photos. When buying a used camera you’d want to go for lowest shutter count you can find which will give you most life with that camera. You are interested in finding your FUJIFILM Camera’s shutter count for two reasons – you are curious for your own self or you are buying/selling a camera so you want to know/advertise how used it is.
