MICKEY88
<font color=purple>if you keep falling off of the
- Joined
- May 15, 2003
- Messages
- 9,465
If you reread my post I acknowledge the existance of reports of failure, I never stated an opinion that it could not happen.
But please feel free to post "facts" with the actual failure rates, not just YOUR opinion that it is unsafe. Yes it "can" occur, that does not exactly make it "unsafe."
Let me clear things up, I am not "defending" Mark since as you said he does not need it. More like defending my own actions since you have called them unsafe.
I called your warning VALID, but IMO(yes my opinion) the failure rate too low to change "MY SHOOTING" style. I have read about BENT pins suffered while inserting compact flash cards into their DSLR at a much higher rate, but nobody is warning anyone against doing so.
until youi brought it up, no one was talking about your habits, or actions
can mount damage occur, yes it's a fact, is there any harm in me telling someone that, I don't think so, did the person I was talking to say" oh my that concerns me}?? no, therefore I don't see the point of jumping in and saying I do it and have never had a problem....
kind of like telling kids smoking is dangerous and a 20 year smoker saying hogwash..I've done it for years with no harm...LOL
as I pointed out in my other post, I had the same attitude about warnings when I was told of the risk of damaging a flash from rapid sequential flash shots, I had never in 31 years of photography heard of such a thing,until it happened to me, I have heard of mount damage,
perhaps I should add a little more detail to that thought,, mount failure doesn't neccessarily mean your lens falls off, it can be as simple as a lens not fitting snugly to the body, it can be the mount on the lens, not justthe body mount...which in turn allows stray light into the camera, throwing off your exposure, sometimes this happens and the photographer wonders why pictures aren't turning out quite right