So, with no one warning me off I finally went ahead and ordered a Canon 7D body, and decided to save myself an extra £30 by paying by bank transfer. This is my story.
Buying:
Around midnight on Wednesday I emailed asking how to pay by bank transfer. In the morning I woke up to a reply asking me to confirm my order so an invoice could be made an to ensure I was aware it was an import model. That itself was quite reassuring, I was aware of the implications but they could have risked a sale. Shortly after replying I received an invoice and paid. I did not receive confirmation of receipt until overnight due to the time difference, but at lunchtime I received a UPS tracking number, and the camera arrived first thing yesterday morning. In total it took about four and a half days from initial contact to having it in my hands.
The Box:
The camera itself is a Japanese model, this was given away immediately by the additional writing on the box in Japanese. It was also a proper body-only box, rather than a bundle one with the lens removed. I guess this is probably normal for a 7D as the added lens options are less attractive to sell separately compare to splitting something like a 5D and 24-105mm bundle.
The Manual:
Inside the box was the free screen protector and the Panamoz warranty "certificate" (a business card with reference number) as well as the usual Canon documents and discs. The manual was a proper English one, although it was for the original v1 firmware. The camera itself has the latest 2.0.3 upgrade which has added a few new features. An updated manual can be downloaded from Canon's site, which presumably would have been included with an official UK model.
The Charger:
Canon supply one of two different chargers, seemingly at random, with and without a built-in plug. Unfortunately I had the built-in style which had a flip-out Japanese flat two-pin plug, so an adaptor had also been included.
The Body:
Having read the stories about Digital Rev selling "fake" 5Ds the first thing I did was check the shutter actuations, which was set to zero. This was paranoia on my part as I have heard nothing similar about the 7D or Panamoz, but it was easy enough to check that it was better to reassure myself.
Turning the camera on was the other giveaway to its origins, as the menus were in Japanese. Canon though had the good sense to add an icon to the language menu item (the one with a speech bubble, on the second yellow spanner page) so I was quickly able to work out how to switch it to English, which was the only other option.
Overall:
The service was very fast and helpful. The only issues with being an import model are that the charger needs an adapter, the manual is slightly out of date, and the camera only has two language options rather than over a dozen. Given that I do not speak those other languages, most 7D owners did not get a new manual when they upgraded firmware, and Canon even endorse using an adapter when taking your charger abroad these are all trivial. They are certainly not worth the extra £400 (40% more) it would have cost buying a UK model.
Oh, and the camera itself is lush, it is like something from the future after my old 30D. If this is what we have today, then it will be amazing to wait and see what 2011 may bring.
Buying:
Around midnight on Wednesday I emailed asking how to pay by bank transfer. In the morning I woke up to a reply asking me to confirm my order so an invoice could be made an to ensure I was aware it was an import model. That itself was quite reassuring, I was aware of the implications but they could have risked a sale. Shortly after replying I received an invoice and paid. I did not receive confirmation of receipt until overnight due to the time difference, but at lunchtime I received a UPS tracking number, and the camera arrived first thing yesterday morning. In total it took about four and a half days from initial contact to having it in my hands.
The Box:
The camera itself is a Japanese model, this was given away immediately by the additional writing on the box in Japanese. It was also a proper body-only box, rather than a bundle one with the lens removed. I guess this is probably normal for a 7D as the added lens options are less attractive to sell separately compare to splitting something like a 5D and 24-105mm bundle.
The Manual:
Inside the box was the free screen protector and the Panamoz warranty "certificate" (a business card with reference number) as well as the usual Canon documents and discs. The manual was a proper English one, although it was for the original v1 firmware. The camera itself has the latest 2.0.3 upgrade which has added a few new features. An updated manual can be downloaded from Canon's site, which presumably would have been included with an official UK model.
The Charger:
Canon supply one of two different chargers, seemingly at random, with and without a built-in plug. Unfortunately I had the built-in style which had a flip-out Japanese flat two-pin plug, so an adaptor had also been included.
The Body:
Having read the stories about Digital Rev selling "fake" 5Ds the first thing I did was check the shutter actuations, which was set to zero. This was paranoia on my part as I have heard nothing similar about the 7D or Panamoz, but it was easy enough to check that it was better to reassure myself.
Turning the camera on was the other giveaway to its origins, as the menus were in Japanese. Canon though had the good sense to add an icon to the language menu item (the one with a speech bubble, on the second yellow spanner page) so I was quickly able to work out how to switch it to English, which was the only other option.
Overall:
The service was very fast and helpful. The only issues with being an import model are that the charger needs an adapter, the manual is slightly out of date, and the camera only has two language options rather than over a dozen. Given that I do not speak those other languages, most 7D owners did not get a new manual when they upgraded firmware, and Canon even endorse using an adapter when taking your charger abroad these are all trivial. They are certainly not worth the extra £400 (40% more) it would have cost buying a UK model.
Oh, and the camera itself is lush, it is like something from the future after my old 30D. If this is what we have today, then it will be amazing to wait and see what 2011 may bring.
