Will people ever learn?Taiwan
A camera rental company found its cameras and lenses severely damaged after people took them to shoot the solar eclipse last month.
This, despite warning users not to point their cameras directly at the sun.
SEE ALSO: The most epic images from the 2017 total solar eclipseOnline rental shop LensRentalstold renters that solar filters had to be attached to lenses to protect them and camera sensors during the eclipse.
Naturally, some people didn't listen.
Here are the results, from burnt shutter systems:
To damaged sensors:
This Nikon D500 saw its mirror melt:
And this Canon EF 600mm f/4L IS II USM lens (which costs a casual $11,499) had its aperture blades destroyed:
"The most common problem we encountered was sensors being destroyed by the heat. We wanted everyone to buy a solar filter for your lens and also sent out mass emails and fliers," said Zach Sutton, the editor of LensRentals in a blogpost.
"Hopefully [this] will serve as a warning to those who are already prepping for the next eclipse in 2024."
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Skates in the deep sea may incubate eggs near 'black smoker' vents
What's coming to Hulu in October 2017
Apple Watch Series 3 teardown shows a beefed
YouTuber puts iPhone 8 through cringeworthy scratch and bend test
Nvidia Pascal Goes Mobile: GeForce GTX 1080, 1070 & 1060 Preview
How to use the new QuickType keyboard in iOS 11
How to use the new QuickType keyboard in iOS 11
Megyn Kelly debuts morning show, Twitter hates it
LinkedIn launches ‘Zip,’ a brain
Beats Studio3 wireless headphones review: Simply the best
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。