I sent my five year old Canon 60D back to Canon for repair. The lens would not close. The cost would be nearly $600. I don't think I want to do this so I asked them about other options. Below is part of there response:
"Thank you for contacting Canon product support regarding an alternative to the repair of your EOS 60D. I'm happy to assist you.
You may want to participate in our Canon Upgrade Program. This option allows you to replace your current camera with a new Canon camera for a discounted fee, and have it shipped via Ground delivery. Refurbished cameras may also be available. Replacement cameras offered through this program include a one-year limited warranty. The original camera will be retained by the factory service center for recycling."
Would anyone have any suggestions for me as to what I may want to do. I don't want to spend much more than $1000.
Thank you
You're the only one that can make that decision. A suggestion is the refurbed route. You can get a far better camera for less money.
--Bob
Jmarkohio wrote:
I sent my five year old Canon 60D back to Canon for repair. The lens would not close. The cost would be nearly $600. I don't think I want to do this so I asked them about other options. Below is part of there response:
"Thank you for contacting Canon product support regarding an alternative to the repair of your EOS 60D. I'm happy to assist you.
You may want to participate in our Canon Upgrade Program. This option allows you to replace your current camera with a new Canon camera for a discounted fee, and have it shipped via Ground delivery. Refurbished cameras may also be available. Replacement cameras offered through this program include a one-year limited warranty. The original camera will be retained by the factory service center for recycling."
Would anyone have any suggestions for me as to what I may want to do. I don't want to spend much more than $1000.
Thank you
I sent my five year old Canon 60D back to Canon fo... (
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Plieku69
Loc: The Gopher State, south end
I bought an 80D refurb from Canon in January. Near as I can tell it's brand new, just does not come in the normal box. I would do it again in a heart beat.
Ken
I just bought a refurb 7D II and it has the same Canon warranty as a new camera for $500 more. It looks new, acts like new and I'm a happy camper.
See if you can get the better 80D. It's quite an upgrade from the 60D. Refurbished it should be in your price range. They had 15% for the week of halloween. Sale is over now.
Jmarkohio wrote:
I sent my five year old Canon 60D back to Canon for repair. The lens would not close. The cost would be nearly $600. I don't think I want to do this so I asked them about other options. Below is part of there response:
"Thank you for contacting Canon product support regarding an alternative to the repair of your EOS 60D. I'm happy to assist you.
You may want to participate in our Canon Upgrade Program. This option allows you to replace your current camera with a new Canon camera for a discounted fee, and have it shipped via Ground delivery. Refurbished cameras may also be available. Replacement cameras offered through this program include a one-year limited warranty. The original camera will be retained by the factory service center for recycling."
Would anyone have any suggestions for me as to what I may want to do. I don't want to spend much more than $1000.
Thank you
I sent my five year old Canon 60D back to Canon fo... (
show quote)
Yes the 80D. I got a refurb last year for under $1,000. If they are willing to give you a few bucks as an upgrade, take it. It would be hard to sell a broken camera anyway.
You ask: "Would anyone have any suggestions for me as to what I may want to do"? The subject line indicates you want to replace your existing Canon camera with another Canon camera.
Let me please say that this kind of question typically triggers a boatload of replies suggesting this or that camera.
I suggest you read reviews of cameras that attract you. Then rent to try one or more before you buy.
Like others here, I've bought refurbished cameras from Canon to my satisfaction. Some have noted that a refurbished camera in fact may come in better condition than a new camera because a human will have looked it over completely to determine its conformity to specification.
Good luck.
Jmarkohio wrote:
I sent my five year old Canon 60D back to Canon for repair. The lens would not close. The cost would be nearly $600. I don't think I want to do this so I asked them about other options. Below is part of there response:
"Thank you for contacting Canon product support regarding an alternative to the repair of your EOS 60D. I'm happy to assist you.
You may want to participate in our Canon Upgrade Program. This option allows you to replace your current camera with a new Canon camera for a discounted fee, and have it shipped via Ground delivery. Refurbished cameras may also be available. Replacement cameras offered through this program include a one-year limited warranty. The original camera will be retained by the factory service center for recycling."
Would anyone have any suggestions for me as to what I may want to do. I don't want to spend much more than $1000.
Thank you
I sent my five year old Canon 60D back to Canon fo... (
show quote)
Canon refurbished is the way to go. I just got a Canon G9X last week from their Halloween special and love it. If it was used, it was handled by ghosts. Last year, I got the 100-400mm L II zoom. Also refurbished for $1499 and again, ghosts. they both came with a one year warranty but no white box. As others have said, you can trust their refurbished equipment completely.
No matter what you do, do not spend $600 to repair this camera!! You can find them for $400 to $450 used, probably less if going to eBay rather than a camera reseller.
A better play is to update. I'd look at the 80D, but of course I'd be spending your money and maybe that cost is more than you want to spend (it seems from your comments). Look at a used 70D too.
dsmeltz wrote:
Yes the 80D. I got a refurb last year for under $1,000. If they are willing to give you a few bucks as an upgrade, take it. It would be hard to sell a broken camera anyway.
Not necessarily so! Broken camera's bring surprisingly very good prices on eBay very often, listed as "for repair"
Very good. I suspect repair shops fix and sell them.l
Don't know what type of shooting you do or what lenses you own, to suggest a replacement. Canon refurbished is a great option, through my experiences. If you can go a few more dollars one of my favorite bodies is the 7DII.
Go to your local camera store or Best Buy where you can hold and get the feel for the camera of your choice. Local camera stores will often let you test drive, rent a camera before making a decision. Read reviews on which camera would best fit what your shooting preferences are, within your price range. After that go shopping for your best deal...
Have fun!!!
Kuzano wrote:
Not necessarily so! Broken camera's bring surprisingly very good prices on eBay very often, listed as "for repair"
Very good. I suspect repair shops fix and sell them.l
But we do not know what canon is offering in the upgrade route. If it is more than $150.00, I would jump on it.
Jmarkohio wrote:
I sent my five year old Canon 60D back to Canon for repair. The lens would not close. The cost would be nearly $600. I don't think I want to do this so I asked them about other options. Below is part of there response:
"Thank you for contacting Canon product support regarding an alternative to the repair of your EOS 60D. I'm happy to assist you.
You may want to participate in our Canon Upgrade Program. This option allows you to replace your current camera with a new Canon camera for a discounted fee, and have it shipped via Ground delivery. Refurbished cameras may also be available. Replacement cameras offered through this program include a one-year limited warranty. The original camera will be retained by the factory service center for recycling."
Would anyone have any suggestions for me as to what I may want to do. I don't want to spend much more than $1000.
Thank you
I sent my five year old Canon 60D back to Canon fo... (
show quote)
Why don't you go back at them and asked just how much such disounted fee would be and then make a decision?
Jmarkohio wrote:
I sent my five year old Canon 60D back to Canon for repair. The lens would not close. The cost would be nearly $600. I don't think I want to do this so I asked them about other options. Below is part of there response:
"Thank you for contacting Canon product support regarding an alternative to the repair of your EOS 60D. I'm happy to assist you.
You may want to participate in our Canon Upgrade Program. This option allows you to replace your current camera with a new Canon camera for a discounted fee, and have it shipped via Ground delivery. Refurbished cameras may also be available. Replacement cameras offered through this program include a one-year limited warranty. The original camera will be retained by the factory service center for recycling."
Would anyone have any suggestions for me as to what I may want to do. I don't want to spend much more than $1000.
Thank you
I sent my five year old Canon 60D back to Canon fo... (
show quote)
Canon store refurbished as of 5 minutes ago:
http://shop.usa.canon.com/shop/en/catalog/cameras/refurbished-eos-digital-slr-cameras#facet:&productBeginIndex:0&orderBy:&pageView:&pageSize:&You can get the 70D body with 18-55 lens for a whole $1 more than body alone and for only $30 more you can get the 80D with that lens. (they must be desperate to get rid of refurb 18-55 lenses since the 80D body alone is now $20 more than the combo)
I've bought a few refurbished 80D's in the past 10 months. They were like new for considerably less than new. Great camera to replace your 60D.
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