Trigeek
Member
Hi,
A week ago, I bought a Fuji GF670. Great little camera. I went to shoot today and found that the battery was dead. I purchased a new battery and found that when the lens cover is closed, the camera is drawing 5.6mA, when the cover is open, it draws 36mA and when I press the shutter to take a meter reading, it draws 176mA.
Since a new battery has a charge of 800mAh, a 5.6mA draw would take it to no charge in 143 hours, or 6 days. So this certainly seems the reason that the battery is dead. I can only deduct that the camera is defective. Am I missing anything obvious?
Thanks,
Jim
A week ago, I bought a Fuji GF670. Great little camera. I went to shoot today and found that the battery was dead. I purchased a new battery and found that when the lens cover is closed, the camera is drawing 5.6mA, when the cover is open, it draws 36mA and when I press the shutter to take a meter reading, it draws 176mA.
Since a new battery has a charge of 800mAh, a 5.6mA draw would take it to no charge in 143 hours, or 6 days. So this certainly seems the reason that the battery is dead. I can only deduct that the camera is defective. Am I missing anything obvious?
Thanks,
Jim
ath
Well-known
I can only deduct that the camera is defective. Am I missing anything obvious?
Thanks,
Jim
No.
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dan_sutton
Member
seems defective. I had mine for a month, couple rolls of usage and never replaced the battery. sent it back because I didn't gel with the camera but never changed the battery
Trigeek
Member
Received a replacement camera. There is still some battery drain when the lens cover is closed, though significiantly lower. Probably a good idea to remove the battery for extended periods of down time.
Photon42
burn the box
Received a replacement camera. There is still some battery drain when the lens cover is closed, though significiantly lower. Probably a good idea to remove the battery for extended periods of down time.
I don't want to leave you with your findings, so I thought I take out the old orange VA meter and have a look. Again I found that when man was created, clearly no debugging of electronic devices was necessary, as a third hand was definitely needed for all the wiring involved
Findings Fuji GF 670:
0.03 mA hood closed
29 mA hood open
70 mA hood open, button pressed
800 divided by 0.03 gives around 26'600 hours, or around 1'100 days or around three years standby time. I still wonder why there is any pull, as they have the on/off switch linked to the bonnet.
Rgds
Ivo
drinkingeye
Well-known
got mine one year ago - still the first battery in after around 30 film rolls...good luck solving this problem. it's a terrific all purpose camera, I love mine! cheers mauro
furcafe
Veteran
The battery that came w/mine was weak & only lasted about 5 rolls. Since replacing it in February, however, the current battery has been doing fine.
hausen
Well-known
I have the Fuji GF670 and the same thing happened to me. I went through 3 batteries in the first 4 rolls of film. Mine is jetting from NZ to Fuji Japan because they don't sell them here in NZ. The thought is there is an open circuit somewhere. Am heading to Moorea in 4 weeks and hope it is back by then.
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