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Thread started 14 Sep 2006 (Thursday) 16:04
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Water damaged 70-200mm 2.8 worth repairing?

 
friendofasquid
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Sep 14, 2006 16:04 |  #1

Hello hello,

I need a little advice.

70-200mm lens dropped in a pool (oops)

No warranty left.

Can this be repaired? Is it worth getting repaired? Anyone have any idea how much this will set me back?

Thanks!




  
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Jakpro
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Sep 14, 2006 16:07 |  #2

Call Canon service and ask them for an estimate.




  
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Tapeman
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Sep 14, 2006 16:07 |  #3

Send it to Canon for a quote, then decide.


Canon G1X II, 1D MKIV, 5DSR, 5DIV, 5D MKII, 16-35/2.8L II, 24-70/2.8L II, 70-200/2.8L IS II, IS, 100-400/4.5-5.6 L IS II, 500/4 L IS II, 24-105/4 IS, 50/2.5 macro, 1.4x MKII, 1.4X MKIII, 2X MKIII,580EX II, 550EXs(2), ST-E2.
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friendofasquid
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Sep 14, 2006 16:27 as a reply to  @ Tapeman's post |  #4

Kay thanks, will do.




  
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Double ­ Negative
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Sep 14, 2006 16:44 |  #5

Chances are good that you can repair it, and it shouldn't be too expensive. Things in your favor:

- The power to the lens (electronics) was OFF when it got wet
- It fell into a pool, not salt water

Most likely they'll disassemble the lens and clean everything and relubricate.


La Vida Leica! (external link) LitPixel Galleries (external link) -- 1V-HS, 1D Mark IIn & 5D Mark IV w/BG-E20
15mm f/2.8, 14mm f/2.8L, 24mm f/1.4L II, 35mm f/1.4L, 50mm f/1.2L, 85mm f/1.2L II, 135mm f/2.0L
16-35mm f/2.8L, 24-70mm f/2.8L, 70-200mm f/2.8L IS, 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS, Extender EF 1.4x II & 2x II

  
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steved110
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Sep 14, 2006 17:10 as a reply to  @ Double Negative's post |  #6

It should cost a lot less than a new lens to fix this.
Bad luck though.


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CanonEF 17-40 f/4 L Canon EF 24-70 f/4 IS L and 70-200 f/4 L :D
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crsouser
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Sep 14, 2006 19:13 as a reply to  @ steved110's post |  #7

I would love to see a thread of what different people are quoted for repairs for different items so people can get an estimate of what it is going to cost them to repair things.

I know I had broken plastic feet on one of my 550ex flashes and that cost me $110, and then I had another 550ex that was more severely broken and it also cost me $110 plus S&H. So at least my experience so far that Canon does 'flat rate fixes' for things.

Let me us know what they quote you to repair the lense, and is this an IS or non-is as I am sure that makes a difference with their quote.

Christopher


-I enjoy photographing things that move and breath more than things that do not.
5D Mk II, 40D, XT IR, 85mm 1.2 I, 24mm 1.4, 100-400mm 3.5-5.6IS, 70-200 2.8IS, 70-300 DO IS, 16-35 2.8 I, 24-105 4, 50 1.8

  
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lostdoggy
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Sep 14, 2006 19:44 |  #8

Wow $110 to replace a hotshoe. I repaired it myself for $8.00 and bought a spare for just in case it breaks again. Total time it took to repair it under 15 minute.




  
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lummy
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Sep 15, 2006 01:16 |  #9

It is really going to depend on whether or not water got in between the element pieces and if so, which elements. If you look at a cross section of a lens, each element is made up of 2 to 3 pieces of glass. Canon doesn't dissasemble elements to clean them, they'll replace it.
I can say that the first element is $400 for the part without labor. I think their standard labor rate is $200 for the 70-200

Like everyone else said, send it in to Canon to at least get an idea




  
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crsouser
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Sep 15, 2006 03:34 as a reply to  @ lostdoggy's post |  #10

lostdoggy wrote:
Wow $110 to replace a hotshoe. I repaired it myself for $8.00 and bought a spare for just in case it breaks again. Total time it took to repair it under 15 minute.

Well the local shop wanted $75 an hour (min 1 hr) plus parts just to look at it and do the repair. So I figured just sending it to Canon for repair would be easy enough and I would have a fixed cost.

Christopher


-I enjoy photographing things that move and breath more than things that do not.
5D Mk II, 40D, XT IR, 85mm 1.2 I, 24mm 1.4, 100-400mm 3.5-5.6IS, 70-200 2.8IS, 70-300 DO IS, 16-35 2.8 I, 24-105 4, 50 1.8

  
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Livinthalife
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Sep 15, 2006 03:37 |  #11

in the pool??? were you playin frissbee with it? lol

serious, sorry to hear that...but as mentioned above, it will be much cheaper than buying a new lens...Good luck with it.


-Andy-

  
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mrfourcows
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Sep 15, 2006 04:32 as a reply to  @ Livinthalife's post |  #12

do keep it in the dry box in the meanwhile, i think it helps!

there was once i was cleaning the front element of my ef 85mm f/1.8 and well, i slipped and about 5ml of water got into the lens. i know its not a lot compared to a whole pool, but. and after it got wet, the af wouldn't work and the lens was foggy. at that time, i thought that a trip to canon would be in line. but as i was busy, i waited a week, and then when i tried it again, it was working fine!

of course, in your case, i wouldn't expect it to just turn out fine. but like i said, i think it helps.


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blackviolet
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Sep 15, 2006 04:36 as a reply to  @ Livinthalife's post |  #13

Livinthalife wrote:
in the pool??? were you playin frissbee with it? lol

well he is 'friend of a squid'...

i like the idea of having a sticky repair thread with costing details.


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Double ­ Negative
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Sep 15, 2006 09:06 |  #14

Here's a little secret.

You can completely submerse electronics and they'll still work just fine when they're DRY. Key word is dry here - if there's any humidity on the circuit board you could short things out at worst or have at least random errors during operation.

I used to wash off old motherboards in the sink with a soft brush and dishwashing liquid. :D

You could put a lens in a Ziploc(TM) bag with a handful of silica gel packs...


La Vida Leica! (external link) LitPixel Galleries (external link) -- 1V-HS, 1D Mark IIn & 5D Mark IV w/BG-E20
15mm f/2.8, 14mm f/2.8L, 24mm f/1.4L II, 35mm f/1.4L, 50mm f/1.2L, 85mm f/1.2L II, 135mm f/2.0L
16-35mm f/2.8L, 24-70mm f/2.8L, 70-200mm f/2.8L IS, 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS, Extender EF 1.4x II & 2x II

  
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rklepper
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Sep 15, 2006 10:33 |  #15

Warranty would not have covered it anyway. Do you have homeowners insurance, it might cover it.

friendofasquid wrote:
Hello hello,

I need a little advice.

70-200mm lens dropped in a pool (oops)

No warranty left.

Can this be repaired? Is it worth getting repaired? Anyone have any idea how much this will set me back?

Thanks!


Doc Klepper in the USA
I
am a photorealist, I like my photos with a touch of what was actually there.
Polite C&C always welcome, Thanks. Gear List

  
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Water damaged 70-200mm 2.8 worth repairing?
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