- SHUTTERCOUNT 5DMIII SERIAL NUMBER
- SHUTTERCOUNT 5DMIII UPDATE
- SHUTTERCOUNT 5DMIII FULL
- SHUTTERCOUNT 5DMIII SOFTWARE
- SHUTTERCOUNT 5DMIII PLUS
SHUTTERCOUNT 5DMIII FULL
The full list of cameras supported via USB is on the ShutterCount Tech Specs page.
SHUTTERCOUNT 5DMIII SOFTWARE
You have all the latest software updates installed on your Mac, iPhone, iPad or iPod touch.Updates can be downloaded from the respective App Store. You are using the latest version of ShutterCount.Q5 - ShutterCount does not recognize my USB connected camera Several EOS M models operate in mass storage mode only, and does not allow PTP remote control (which is needed for the reading).(Check out this Wikipedia page to see which chip is used by a given camera.) Pre-DIGIC III Canon cameras do not provide shutter count information through the USB port.There are technical limitations that prevent us from supporting some cameras: on a Mac and More > Camera Settings > Edit Owner Name on iPhone/iPad). Alternatively you can use the menu ( Camera > Edit Owner Name.
SHUTTERCOUNT 5DMIII PLUS
The Plus Pack offers the functionality to change the owner name: just click or tap the Owner Name label on the camera summary screen.
Only the author/artist name can be set in-camera. You can set two different names for your Canon EOS camera: an owner's name and an author/artist name. There is no resolution or workaround unless Canon changes this behavior. Note that the built-in shutter counter on the EOS-1D X is also affected by this phenomenon. Or the easiest way to reproduce this phenomenon is to power the camera with a DC adapter and just pull the plug. But when the battery runs too low during shooting, it might not provide enough power for a proper shutdown. So it's hard to cause an abrupt power cut this way. The time it takes to fully open the door is usually enough for the shutdown. When you remove the battery the first thing the camera does after detecting that the battery door is open is to shut itself down properly. If power gets cut abruptly, then the camera fails to do a proper shutdown and will not add the session count to the non-volatile count - resulting in "missing" shots. It is incremented during the session and added to the non-volatile count when the camera is turned off. The session count is zeroed when the camera is powered on. What ShutterCount displays is the non-volatile count. There are two numbers: a non-volatile count and a session (volatile) count (a session is the time interval between power-offs). The cause of this shutter count discrepancy is how Canon's firmware counts actuations. But ShutterCount displays a lower value, 8950. Q2 - Shutter count value is lower than expectedįor example you bought a camera new, the EXIF file number was not reset, and the current EXIF number shows that you have 9400 shots. In case of the 5D Mark III the fist version known to work correctly is 1.2.1.
SHUTTERCOUNT 5DMIII UPDATE
You should update to the latest available firmware. As the camera chops off the lower 32 bits, only the upper 32 bits are returned giving the value 7.
SHUTTERCOUNT 5DMIII SERIAL NUMBER
Using the above example, the full 64-bit serial number in hexadecimal representation is 00000007 EB64059A. There is a bug in older Canon camera firmware revisions that chop off the lower 32 bits of the serial number, thus returning an incorrect short string.
For example, instead of 034012005786 on an 5D Mark III you get just 7. Instead of the correct serial number ShutterCount displays a small number. Q1 - Serial number not displayed correctly