dcisive
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- Lee Rothman
I was out shooting with my A6700 yesterday with the 200-600G attached. I was out looking for birds since it was the first sunny day I'd seen in almost 2 weeks here. It was about 42 degrees F and about 70% humidity. That said I managed to nail some great bird shots for a bit. Then I went to my buttons that run the Subject Recognition On/Off (I have the red record button set for that) and the AF-On button on the top back for the purpose of running through the subjects desired selection. I was hitting the AF-On button quickly to cycle to Bird just making sure that's what it was on and I got a LCD screen with hash marks on it then it died.
I removed the battery, reinserted it and fired it up. Did the same thing half a dozen times. I was thinking "oh boy I got a defective camera?" So later I went to another location and this time virtually ALL the shots of birds were out of focus. I got home. Disassembled the lens, battery and let it sit for a bit while I began working with the images on my card. An hour or so later I re assembled it all and tried my best to get it to repeat the offense. I rapidly hit the AF-On button when selecting the various subjects and it simply would NOT burb this time and worked perfectly.
So.......this morning I called Sony Tech Support and spoke to a Tech. After describing the problem I got and that I couldn't get it to repeat he asked #1 were my shooting conditions involving cold or moist environment? I said Yes. and #2 How are you holding, supporting and walking around with the lens. I told him most often when transporting it I tend to walk around with my fingers on the grip allowing the lens to hang as I walk. Then support it by my left hand when shooting.
So...........here's what he had to say. He said he has run into some fairly rare instances where with the smaller bodies, if one is using their larger zoom lenses. Like the heavy ones especially the 200-600G, that if a person is NOT supporting it by either the lens or at least by the tripod mount (in my case I have that nice Kirk replacement foot which is longer, lighter and more solid then the stock one) that they've noted there can be a small temporary compromise of the connection of the contacts between the body and lens. Due largely to the fact the weight difference is substantial. Also what can contribute to this is the very slight compromise of the contact added with some temperature/moisture in it's environment.
He said what points to this is I had not had it happen the other day when I did happen to walk outside in similar weather but carried it by the tripod mount not the body hanging the lens off of it. Also that with NO other lens does it nor has it happened. So I'm going to assume at this time he's right and I have nothing to worry about. Because I sure don't want to have to return this baby again. I'm enjoying it far too much. If there were in fact some issue of firmware/hardware that was epidemic in this model (as has been seen on a Reddit forum I searched this on) then I would have no choice. I'll keep you all updated on whether this may happen again. Pray it doesn't that's for sure. The results when it worked yesterday were exemplary.
I removed the battery, reinserted it and fired it up. Did the same thing half a dozen times. I was thinking "oh boy I got a defective camera?" So later I went to another location and this time virtually ALL the shots of birds were out of focus. I got home. Disassembled the lens, battery and let it sit for a bit while I began working with the images on my card. An hour or so later I re assembled it all and tried my best to get it to repeat the offense. I rapidly hit the AF-On button when selecting the various subjects and it simply would NOT burb this time and worked perfectly.
So.......this morning I called Sony Tech Support and spoke to a Tech. After describing the problem I got and that I couldn't get it to repeat he asked #1 were my shooting conditions involving cold or moist environment? I said Yes. and #2 How are you holding, supporting and walking around with the lens. I told him most often when transporting it I tend to walk around with my fingers on the grip allowing the lens to hang as I walk. Then support it by my left hand when shooting.
So...........here's what he had to say. He said he has run into some fairly rare instances where with the smaller bodies, if one is using their larger zoom lenses. Like the heavy ones especially the 200-600G, that if a person is NOT supporting it by either the lens or at least by the tripod mount (in my case I have that nice Kirk replacement foot which is longer, lighter and more solid then the stock one) that they've noted there can be a small temporary compromise of the connection of the contacts between the body and lens. Due largely to the fact the weight difference is substantial. Also what can contribute to this is the very slight compromise of the contact added with some temperature/moisture in it's environment.
He said what points to this is I had not had it happen the other day when I did happen to walk outside in similar weather but carried it by the tripod mount not the body hanging the lens off of it. Also that with NO other lens does it nor has it happened. So I'm going to assume at this time he's right and I have nothing to worry about. Because I sure don't want to have to return this baby again. I'm enjoying it far too much. If there were in fact some issue of firmware/hardware that was epidemic in this model (as has been seen on a Reddit forum I searched this on) then I would have no choice. I'll keep you all updated on whether this may happen again. Pray it doesn't that's for sure. The results when it worked yesterday were exemplary.