nigelp
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2009
- Messages
- 137
Hi - newbie here with a rather sad tale.
I am just back from my second visit to WDW and was looking forward to taking lots of pictures (inspired by many photos seen on here). Unfortunately, I took my camera on the Jaws ride at Universal and it got 'eaten by Jaws' - or rather a huge wave splashed over the side of the boat and totally soaked it - it was in a camera bag to protect it. When I got off the ride it was totally dead.
I left it to dry and two days later it came back to life - but with a few problems. It won't switch off unless I remove the batteries, it takes longer to focus (often failing altogether in darker light) and any batteries left in the camera overnight are totally drained by the morning.
I am hoping that my insurance will cover it - but they are asking for it to be checked to see if it can be repaired. My only concern is that the repairers will think that it is fine as it switches on ok and takes pictures.
The brightside is that although the 8GB card in the camera was ruined I was still able to recover all the photos off it, and I had plenty of spare cards for the rest of the trip. So no memories lost.
We returned to Universal later on and took a photo of me under the large Jaws model holding the camera in its mouth
I am just back from my second visit to WDW and was looking forward to taking lots of pictures (inspired by many photos seen on here). Unfortunately, I took my camera on the Jaws ride at Universal and it got 'eaten by Jaws' - or rather a huge wave splashed over the side of the boat and totally soaked it - it was in a camera bag to protect it. When I got off the ride it was totally dead.
I left it to dry and two days later it came back to life - but with a few problems. It won't switch off unless I remove the batteries, it takes longer to focus (often failing altogether in darker light) and any batteries left in the camera overnight are totally drained by the morning.
I am hoping that my insurance will cover it - but they are asking for it to be checked to see if it can be repaired. My only concern is that the repairers will think that it is fine as it switches on ok and takes pictures.
The brightside is that although the 8GB card in the camera was ruined I was still able to recover all the photos off it, and I had plenty of spare cards for the rest of the trip. So no memories lost.
We returned to Universal later on and took a photo of me under the large Jaws model holding the camera in its mouth

) and they said it was from a short. it was fixable but imo not worth the money canon wanted to do it. i sold it to adorama, they fixed it and sold it. if your insurance doesn't help, check and see if they'll buy it, at least it will be better than nothing
