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Camera doesn't switch on when connected through USB (Read 333 times)
Jan 25th, 2010 at 1:20pm

machineman9   Offline
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I have the Canon EOS 1000D DSLR and I've been noticing a problem with it recently whenever I try and connect it to my computer to transfer images.

When connecting it, I turn off the camera, plug in the USB and turn on the camera. Usually the camera turns on, connects, hey presto it's working. However, recently when I turn it on, it stays off and my computer doesn't recognise the camera at all; it doesn't say anything is connected.

If I remove the USB then the camera remains switched off. In fact, I have to entirely remove the battery and put it back in and then turn it on for it to work. Then, when I connect the USB in the same manner as above, it works fine.


Could the problem be with the USB cable in some way, or is there something wrong with the camera?

Cheers
 

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Reply #1 - Jan 25th, 2010 at 7:33pm

Hagar   Offline
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Take my tip & use a card reader to transfer your photos onto the PC. If you haven't got one built into your PC  the external type aren't expensive.
 

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Reply #2 - Jan 25th, 2010 at 7:52pm

a1   Offline
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Hagar wrote on Jan 25th, 2010 at 7:33pm:
Take my tip & use a card reader to transfer your photos onto the PC. If you haven't got one built into your PC  the external type aren't expensive.



I second that even though I still use my USB cord for my picture transfers. From my experiences when I had one it seemed to read much faster and easier to deal with. Wink


Do you have the camera ON when you plug it in?
 

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Reply #3 - Jan 25th, 2010 at 8:07pm

machineman9   Offline
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I do have a card reader, but it doesn't always like to recognise my card (or any cards) because it is rather terrible. USB has always seemed fine for me.

I turn the camera off, then plug it in, then turn it on.
 

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Reply #4 - Jan 27th, 2010 at 8:54am

BSW727   Offline
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I use the Canon software to transfer, but then I move everything to a separate folder for later editing with PS if neccesary.

Don't know what could be wrong, but mine doesn't turn on automatically when connected. I still have to push the on button.

Have you shut down the software through the Services program lately?
 
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Reply #5 - Jan 27th, 2010 at 12:56pm

machineman9   Offline
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Yes, I am manually moving the camera's one switch from Off to On after it has been plugged in  Grin

No, I don't think I've had to close the software down unexpectedly.
 

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Reply #6 - Jan 27th, 2010 at 2:06pm

expat   Offline
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I have dumped USB cables and transfer software on my D40 and my wife's canon point and shoot. Both have eye-fi cards. Turn them on and auto download to your computer via wifi. Also on the fly if your computer happens to be on whist taking pictures within range.

Matt
 

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