![]() So either it was something on the sensor (despite repeated automatic cleanings) or it really did remap the sensor. I took a series of shots and I can't find that spot again. Wait for 30 seconds or more (is this necessary?) The mirror inside opens, but since you are not removing dust, this has really no effect, but it seems that after doing this, the camera remaps the dead pixels.Ĥ) Take another JPG+RAW shot, compare with shots from 2) - same shutter and ISO I did a search and found a thread that discussed this in the 400D:ġ) Put lens or camera cap on, go to a dark room to be sure if you wantĢ) Take JPG+RAW shot, maybe at different ISO and shutter speeds, one could be 30 sec/ISO 1600ģ) Press menu, go to Settings 2 tab, and press sensor Cleaning: Manual, then OK. Sorry for the large image but it is only one pixel so I had to go large. If it is a dead pixel, will Canon fix it? My 400D is a little over a month old. So is it a dead pixel or something on the sensor? Then I took another shot of the wall at home and sure enough there was the same "dead" pixel. I decided to do a dead pixel test and took a series of shots with the lens cap on at different shutter speeds (8 shots from 1/60 to 30 seconds) and I can't see a dead pixel at all, the test showed no hot pixels or dead pixels. ![]() I checked the pictures I took yesterday and the day before and there doesn't seem to be anything there. I checked all the pictures I took tonight and if I go to the same spot each time I can see the same same. When I magnified it looks like a dead pixel (500%). I was taking some night shots and when I was processing them I noticed something odd. I think I had a pixel on my sensor die tonight.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |