Canon repair and body hire.

wingnut

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I need to send my 40d away to be checked over - Dodgy shutter , there is a lag sometimes, not huge but enough to annoy me, it does it when using main button and one on grip. Just worried it might fail altogether.
But my problem is I have not real camera downtime and will need to have a working Canon body whilst mine is away for repair.
Does anyone know of a company that does both or any recommendations for either. Seen some places that are charging a small fortune for body only hire. Almost cheaper to buy a new one and then resell on ebay . Or a second hand one at that.

Cheers in advance.
 
I've heard good things about www.hireacamera.com but never used them myself. You are right about charges though, shocking IMO. Might be better to do as you say and buy a second hand spare body.
 
I'd happily recommend HireACamera.com (for cameras only, obviously). I've met Guy and Helen who run the company and their hearts are in the right place.
 
Cheers guys, that's who I looked at earlier and I am still reeling in shock at the price for a low end DSLR, understand it for high end medium format gear but £227 for a 2 weeks hire of a 40D is a very steep in my book, plus there's delivery on top of that too... Ouch.
Shame you don't do camera hire Stewart...
I will continue the search.
 
Shame you don't do camera hire Stewart...
Yes, we've thought about it. But we're not terribly keen on the idea. Here's why:
  • We think we understand the economics of lens hire (though we haven't been in business long enough to be 100% certain of that!), but we're sure we don't understand the economics of camera hire.
  • We're starting to develop a good understanding of the kinds of situations in which people might want to hire lenses, but - with the obvious exceptions of try-before-you-buy and my-camera-is-broken - we don't understand the kinds of situations in which people might want to hire bodies.
  • We're concerned about the depreciation of bodies. Lenses stay in production for years, but there's always a newest-and-best body out every 12-18 months.
  • We're concerned about the testing workload. (Say you'd hired a 1Ds Mk III from us. How long would it take us to ensure that it was all working correctly when you returned it? I dread to think.)
  • We're concerned that the complexity of modern DSLRs, and the associated learning curve, would mean that many customers would have an unsatisfactory hire experience. (If you gave me, say, a Nikon D3 to use for a week, I very much doubt I would have got the hang of it by the end of the week.)
  • And last but certainly not least, we're pouring all the money we have - and lots that we don't - into buying new lenses. There's no sign that's going to change any time soon.
I'm not ruling it out for the future, and I try never to say never, if you see what I mean. But I'm certainly not in a hurry.

Please feel free to try to persuade me why I'm wrong.
 
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