So here's how the story unfolds...
I'm the chief photographer for my Junior College's Photographic Society and I was tasked with teaching the newcomers on how to shoot formal class photos for yearbooks and stuff.
I hurt my back the day before and could only roll my camera bag to school filled with camera stuff. I didn't want to sling my manfrotto 190CX3 so I requested my friend to bring her benro carbon fiber tripod. We booked a classroom and I set up the small-flash setups, my camera, tripod, macbook connected to projector etc etc. The camera was tethered with a long USB cable.
So I started off saying that we're handling very expensive equipment for the shoot, pocketwizards, SB800's, camera and lenses etc. Half an hour later, one of the benro tripod legs furthest from me retracted, and the setup tipped over away from me. The camera crashed onto the floor, and I wasn't using a hood. The filter shattered, and dented inwards. I was fortunate that I used a long USB cable. Had I used a shorter one I had, the macbook would've been pulled to the floor as well since the USB cable is tethered to camera left, my macbook is on camera right, and the setup fell forward.
So yeah, now it's at Canon Service Center having a surgery. Hopefully there's no internal glass damage, because the tech said that the top part replacement would only cost SGD150++, about USD100. If there's optical damage, the cost will be even higher. Not very good for me when I'm actually trying to sell the lens to get a 16-35L II or 35L, and that I'm a student...
Lesson learnt: Even when benros are set up right, some might fail. It happened once in the store for a new benro (with 'G' locks) and it happened with my friend's benro without G locks. Sadly my lens had to take the fall for me to realise this, literally.




