Jackwow
Well-Known Member
I was out photographing some of the wildfowl at Figgate Park in Edinburgh a couple of weeks ago and while on the boardwalk, which was quite slimy, I suddenly lost my footing and fell backwards. My Canon 7D and 70-300L lens, which I was carrying on a Blackrapid strap, hit the deck hard and I feared the worst. It was a while though before I could check them as I fell backwards onto the edge of one of the wooden step/seat things and had the wind knocked out of me and was in severe pain due to a lacerated and badly bruised back for over a week. Back home, via the hospital (what a waste of time that was) and on checking my gear I was very happy to find that it was working ok. The lens hood took the brunt of the fall and split lengthways but saved the lens, which is worth about £1K, and other than a couple of small marks my 7D was fine. The memory card cover did snap open but the card didn't come out and the cover was fine.
I continued to use the 7D/70-300L on each of the next three days with no issues, but on the fourth day, when I was walking back from taking some shots of Elie Ness lighthouse, I tried to lock the lens barrel but it wouldn't lock and then I noticed that the lens wouldn't retract fully back to 70mm. I tried it again later and noticed that when zooming out it was quite stiff at times and still wouldn't fully retract and then, when I tried to take some pics with it, it wouldn't focus at any focal length! So it didn't survive the fall after all although I was very surprised that it took 4 days of usage before the fault developed?!
So I took it to a camera shop near Inverness, where I am currently staying, who sent it to a specialist repair shop in Glasgow, and 10 days later I received a repair estimate for £428, which together with the £25 repair estimate fee that I had already paid made £453!
I love the 70-300L as it is a superb lens and I use it for almost all my zoo photos but have yet to decide if I want to spend £453 on a repair.
I continued to use the 7D/70-300L on each of the next three days with no issues, but on the fourth day, when I was walking back from taking some shots of Elie Ness lighthouse, I tried to lock the lens barrel but it wouldn't lock and then I noticed that the lens wouldn't retract fully back to 70mm. I tried it again later and noticed that when zooming out it was quite stiff at times and still wouldn't fully retract and then, when I tried to take some pics with it, it wouldn't focus at any focal length! So it didn't survive the fall after all although I was very surprised that it took 4 days of usage before the fault developed?!
So I took it to a camera shop near Inverness, where I am currently staying, who sent it to a specialist repair shop in Glasgow, and 10 days later I received a repair estimate for £428, which together with the £25 repair estimate fee that I had already paid made £453!
I love the 70-300L as it is a superb lens and I use it for almost all my zoo photos but have yet to decide if I want to spend £453 on a repair.