Crashed camera

That was the state of a Sony Alpha A200 when the author of these photos got it. It was… Let’s say someone trod it down several times. The rear view is the same - broken LCD leaked, protective plastic cover was missing. It was absolutely clear that there’s no way to repair this poor camera. So a curious mind and a screwdriver were set on foot.

First impression of seeing the camera naked was a surprise of the level of miniaturization. Plenty of tiny ribbon cables connecting small cards, a flashlight and its capacitor, a beeper ad auto-focus switcher - all this was placed in a small black box which can be easily held in hands.

What’s seen from behind? That big (only comparing with the others) card, the main one, carries probably the CPU (see that Toshiba chip?).



After the main card was gone some more interesting things came to light. That small card on the left is supposed to be a unit controlling data reading from the matrix. The most interesting fact is that it is can moved up and down, left and right. That’s how the image stabilization system works. The other card on the right is a card reader interface. A battery block is under this card.



This unit was decided to leave untouched due to impossibly small size of its details.


| Tags: camera, Photos |













Who figures this stuff out?
A lot of technology crammed into the minimum space.
Good post ER.
OMG is it true Russians are still using stone age era roll films camera made by Kodak in the USA?
It’s digital. FOOL!
Third
There’s a possibility of making this camera work again. Of course, with a broken LCD never would turn to be like before, but taking pictures, at least. The film cameras you had to take pictures without knowing if they’re got good or bad, you had to develop the film to see your pictures, so, a LCD display is not a must. But helps a lot, tough. Of course that if I would charge for this fix, no one would pay the price. That’s a hobby thing only.
And “stone-age era roll films”? There’s some high definition films around (pretty expensive, tough) that no digital camera come close. Of course regular people don’t see the difference, but an specialist does. When the digital cameras goes around, let’s say, 50 megapixels (true, not interpolated), so then films would be considered obsolete. But black & white high-definition films for high-altitude aircraft imaging still would be a hard match.
Ouch! You’re making me miss film! I’m happy to see anyone say nice things about film, and it’s true that the resolution is so much better than a digital camera. Even if you do have to process and print it. Thing I miss most is 3200 speed black and white film. Ahhh, the days…
“Yeah” from the proud user of XD7 and Dynax 5
How sad such a wonderful camera got destroyed like that.
Finnish I received my Finnish language course today.
LOL, that’s cheating! You are bad. :wicked:
The next fun thing to do is to smash the rest of it with a hammer. That never gets old!
What does this camera have to do with Russia?
i cuold fiks this camera yes is all cameras iins rusia broke also too yes i cuold fiks it with peanutt butter sandwhich
Okay I could use all of this to make a sculpture. Of what, who the Hell knows?
I have repaired damages like that. You can buy LCDs off ebay, but the quality will not be the same as before it fell. If that fails, you can still sell it for spare parts.
These Sony Alpha cameras are pretty sturdy, i wonder how many meters it fell down?
GARY LEON BRAYNARD
Born April 8, 1948
ss # 561-74-6506
BRAYNARD, LINDA , Mae,
dob 1950-08-June
ss # 556-72-0101
Typically Russian behavior. Instead of creating something, destroy. Or better… steal it.
Marvellous. All with a screwdriver on your foot.
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