by which time you will have saved up enough for a new camera. Way To Determine 20D Shutter Count in Canon EOS Digital Cameras. You may end up finding out that it may take you years to get there. Shuttercount over 150.000 on K3 Search this Thread: 02-24-2020, 02:57 AM. You may also want to do some math to figure out how long it will take you to get to your camera's expected shutter life span. Regardless of what it is, Ancient_Mariner is right, it's not a guarantee of failure. The 4 characters left are an index to create unique filenames. Memory cards use 8 character filenames, and 4 of those are always 'DSC' or 'DSC' (for Nikon) or comparable. so the number of mirror count can more accurately reflect the situation of the camera. Yes, first it says DSC then the image number (usually the shutter count as well & then the file format (NEF for Raw files) No, that's not a shutter count. Nikon probably has published a number for the expected lifespan if the shutter on the D60. Due to the real-time viewing and video shooting the shutter is in a normally open state, the mirrorup count alwasys wil be greater than shuttercount. Given the sample size of that data and the fact that most of them in the sample are closer to 10,000 actuations, it's an outlying data point and is pretty meaningless.
The 25,000 number he's referring to is a single camera that failed near that number (in the link he posted above). Others can carry on after 100, 150, or even 200.000. Some cameras can fail long before that (although this is rare), Number at or after which the given camera suffers a shutter failure. Number of shutter actuations, that statistically represents the The number you refer to, is an unofficial