DJD wrote:
...Come to find out, I've taken over 380,000 photos within a 2 year period. That count seemed unbelievably high....
So, on average, you have taken roughly 500 photos per day for the last two years? Or, another way of looking at it... a little over 40 shots per hour for every daylight hour of every day the past two years?
It's not impossible, of course... But I'm kinda suspicious of that shutter count. I shoot a lot... and take between 25,000 and 50,000 images per year. I've got a pair of Canon 7D with about 150,000 clicks apiece (i.e. 300,000 for the pair), that were my primary "user" cameras for over five years (I have a third full frame which I put far less mileage on). 380,000 clicks... or about 190,000 per year... is A LOT! If you have actually shot over 4X what I average per year, I'm impressed and hope you got some great shots... odds certainly are that you should. Personally I wouldn't want to spend the time necessary for post-processing and cataloging that many images!
Maybe you could do a rough double-check by counting the image files on your computer or wherever you store them. If the is a mix there from different cameras you've used, you probably can identify the ones taken with this camera by date or with some sort of software. For example, I can see in Lightroom that I have 21,000 images in one location and 42,000 in another, all from 2016. 63,000 is more than my average.... But I know there's a little bit of duplication. Plus I had an unusually intensive week of shooting at a large event in October (more than 17,000 images that week alone).
"Shutter rating" is merely an estimate of MTBF or "mean time between failures". It is basically an
average life expectancy for the shutter assembly... one of the few moving components subject to wear and tear in a modern DLSR (but not the only moving parts.... besides, non-moving/solid state components can fail too).
If a camera has a shutter rated for 150,000 clicks.... It's just a guesstimate from the engineers who designed the components. And, as an average, some will not last that long while others will last longer. Most modern computer-controlled, electromechanical devices either fail quickly... right out of the box and well withing warranty.... or have a long, long happy life.
There is a website that compiles data on camera shutter life.... but your model is way too new and there are far too few user reports there to give much useful info. Even if there were more data, it has to always be taken with a grain of salt because the info is voluntarily submitted (i.e., not a "blind" survey sample) and it isn't verified in any way... assumes submitted data is honest and accurate.
If interested, check out
https://olegkikin.com/shutterlife/sitemap.php Since your camera model has limited data, you might get some additional info by looking at earlier models in the series. That again isn't entirely reliable, but it's all we've got. The camera manufacturers' own service centers and repair data would be the most accurate, but none of them make that information publically available.