EP-2 nearly broke?

raid

Dad Photographer
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Today, and suddenly, no picture would show in the VF after taking a photo. I removed the abttery, I removed the card, I checked the card, I tried all settings on the camera, I used MENU .... nothing worked.

Then I removed the battery, and I chose RESET on MENU. Then I chose RESET 1 on MENU ..... and then it worked again!

I was about to write here to ask whether it was worth repairing or not and if so, where would I get such a repair for it.

No clue what happened.
Could it have been an impact on the camera?
 
I too am sorry to hear this Raid luckily you got it working again...with that said welcome to the wonderful world of digital! Makes one want to take the Contax out for a stroll...
 
This happens to me when I switch from adapter to an AF lens or vice versa.
Turning off the camera and remounting the lens have always worked.
Sometimes I have to remount a couple times.

Glad you got it working.
 
This happens to me when I switch from adapter to an AF lens or vice versa.
Turning off the camera and remounting the lens have always worked.
Sometimes I have to remount a couple times.

Glad you got it working.

I tried the same, Tony. I had a Canon FD lens with adapter first, so I switched to an Olympus AF lens for the EP-2. I am learning.
 
Minox

Minox

I too am sorry to hear this Raid luckily you got it working again...with that said welcome to the wonderful world of digital! Makes one want to take the Contax out for a stroll...

I have a Minox GT as back-up since problems can occur.:D
 
it's electronic...these things seem to happen, if not often then regularly...it gets a hiccup and needs to be reset.
 
This is the kind of thing that causes the bias that I have for mechanical cameras over electronic ones. Not to say that mechanical cameras don't fail, but it is often easier to understand what causes the mechanical failure, and what the fix is. I understand that this a personal bias in me with little basis in objective reality. But then aren't all of our realities subjective?
 
This is the kind of thing that causes the bias that I have for mechanical cameras over electronic ones. Not to say that mechanical cameras don't fail, but it is often easier to understand what causes the mechanical failure, and what the fix is. I understand that this a personal bias in me with little basis in objective reality. But then aren't all of our realities subjective?

the other side of that coin though is that the electronic camera is usually more accurate than a mechanical camera...you win some you lose some.
 
Don't know what wrong with you camera, but as a professional programmer, I can say, that software tends to add metaphysical behavior to an otherwise pure physical machine...

If you still have warranty for your cam, continue using it, and log the exact steps, when it happens. Try to make it reproducible. If you got that, send it to Olympus and ask for removing the metaphysics... In my experience (here in Germany) Olympus-service is very good and quick. (not the Leica type of service with 7 weeks waiting for nearly nothing...)
 
I removed the lens and I can see that the curtain is down. The sensor is hidden.

That is definitely not normal. The sensor is supposed to be exposed whenever the lens is removed. It only closes to make an exposure (open for LV - close/open for shot/close - open for LV)

Do I understand that you were using an FD lens on an adapter when this failure occurred? Or was it with an Olympus lens?

Check the lens mount and see if the contacts look clean or if there's any debris floating around in there (possibly from the adapter) that could short the contacts.

Hope you get it sorted out!

Scott
 
wish i could help but this has never happened to me as i don't use a VF (or legacy lenses yet) on my E-P2. i have, however, had the camera freeze on me before.... when this happens the aperture reading on the LCD (in A priority) or the shutter speed reading (in S priority) completely blacks out and i am left being able to do anything including fire the shutter. sometimes i can turn off the camera with the power button but other times i'm forced to take out the battery to turn it off.... *shrugs* it has only happened a handful of times, so i don't really worry about it. it probably isn't even related to your problem, but hopefully your problem isn't serious.

edit: on a side note, i have never had to reset my camera.
 
That is definitely not normal. The sensor is supposed to be exposed whenever the lens is removed. It only closes to make an exposure (open for LV - close/open for shot/close - open for LV)

Do I understand that you were using an FD lens on an adapter when this failure occurred? Or was it with an Olympus lens?

Check the lens mount and see if the contacts look clean or if there's any debris floating around in there (possibly from the adapter) that could short the contacts.

Hope you get it sorted out!

Scott

Hi Scott,
The problem occurred first with one FD lens, followed several hours later with another FD lens. Sounds suspiciously like the adapter played a role here. Thanks for the tip to check the contacts.
 
Just out of curiosity, was the power off on the camera while changing lenses? It can supposedly happen sometimes that with the power on removing and/or replacing a lens may cause the mount to short the contacts. I have only heard that this may be so take that with a grain of salt. Personally with electronics I like to turn the power off when changing lenses or flash units just in case.

Bob
 
One other thing - check which firmware version your camera has. There have been 2 updates (1.1 and 1.2) and sometimes "undocumented features" ;) get fixed along with the stuff they actually tell you about.

Also I agree with Nikon Bob about turning the camera off when removing/attaching lenses and accessories (especially flashes). I've personally never had anything bad happen when I've forgotten and left a camera on but it's a good practice to get into.

Scott
 
Just out of curiosity, was the power off on the camera while changing lenses? It can supposedly happen sometimes that with the power on removing and/or replacing a lens may cause the mount to short the contacts. I have only heard that this may be so take that with a grain of salt. Personally with electronics I like to turn the power off when changing lenses or flash units just in case.

Bob
Hi Bob,
It happened while taking photos, so I got images, and then with the same lens, the camera died. Still, it may have happened after changing the lens, and in that case, I do not recall if I made the mistake to keep the power on.
 
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