

Getting back home I had to choose keepers from 88GB of images (jpeg mostly), now that was hell.
#SHUTTERCOUNT T2I ARCHIVE#
PS Since you were wondering if it's possible to shoot 5k photos, while I was in Paris this spring, for two weeks, I shot over 1000 pictures per day, every day (that's close to the limit for my two batteries I used). p.1 1 p.1 1 shutter count for T2i hey fellas, nikon guy here i have a T2i and ive tried several sites, including and jeff's shutter page, both found from searching the archive but im not getting actuations. If there's also the jpeg present it renames the raws too (same goes for movies with their thm files) and this makes the folder structure have actual sense (I use the camera name as top criteria, so I separate the different cameras and then just date/time from the exif, year etc) Les meilleures offres pour Canon EOS Rebel T2i 18. Then using something like Amok Exif Sorter is really helpful. But its not an exact match, it can failed at 25.000 or continue to working great after 100.000 actuations. Canon 450D (Canon EOS Rebel XSi) s shutter life is about 50,000 actuations. 5D Mark II s shutter assures trouble-free operation over its 150,000-cycle. I use the regular files count on my photos folder and subtract the number of. Obviously, canon’s professional models last much longer than entry-level model. With my latest camera, I re-used some cards which already had files from another Canon so my numbering jumped a few thousand images by mistake, I don't rely on it ever since.

So, if you never ever have taken any photos with that camera with a card from maybe another canon camera, I guess it's safe to assume your counter reflects the number of photos (and beware of overflowing the counter, at 10,000 if I recall correctly, and also I don't know how it behaves when incrementing the folder from the menu). The trouble starts where it saves this number into its internal numbering and continues from there. My numbering is for sure screwed up since I think (not really sure) that the camera takes the higher between its internal counter and the last file on the card it's saving on.
