I find it kind of incredible that given the price of some of these new mirrorless cameras, overheating would still be a thing. -_- - Thank you for the video!
I was going to do an outdoor still photo shoot with my Canon R6 on a hot evening and the camera froze up. No viewing on the rear screen and no response from pressing any buttons. Called Canon repair and they suggested that I send it in for repair. After not hearing from them, I got through to a phone support person who found my camera's repair order (I didn't know if it safely arrived). All they would tell me is that I need to pay $425 so that a technician could be assigned. I had no choice but to pay over the phone. A side note. In doing wedding photography for years (many hot days) using 5D series bodies, I never had a camera melt down.
Camcorder won't give you a cinematic quality. Most of them have a small sensor and no interchangeable lens. I tried all kinds of them, from middle-class Panasonic to professional Sony. Good for documentaries or TV style shows, never work for music clip or any creative video
@@ShlomoNizin The problem i face is my unstable shaky hands, unimaginative and non-creativity. I have not reached the stage where the cam matters .... well it matters if i cannot record a video continuously for up to 30 minutes without overheating though.
@Unteroffizier You can't get a good image with a smaller sensor. Even with the best hands in the world. Also, you can buy a newer camera without any limitations in video shooting or use the older cameras with some tricks. I'm doing shooting with 3 Canon cameras. Every camera has an intervalometer that starts the video recording again after it stops. So it's virtually unlimited. At least one camera will shoot at the time that another will restart. You won't find a movie or musical clip shooted on a mid-priced camcorder. But there are millions of them shooted on DSLR or mirrorless camera. I would go for inconvenience to win the quality
@@diyfwmbI think that for wedding work, the high end Nikons are the way to go. Fabulous batteries, amazing glass and those massive sensors are sensual?? They're capable at least. So you have a camera that won't run out of battery too quickly and die, won't overheat and die and will shoot incredible stills and video whenever where-ever. Even an old Panasonic Lumix GH5, although and not really built for stills as a priority, is still so much better than a Canon for wedding work; just because its reliable.
I own Nikon, Canon and Sony Mirrorless Cameras and they do overheat in hot Texas weather. I found that downscaling your 4k to 1080p dramatically reduces the chances of overheating. The tips in this video is excellent.
True. However, mirrorless cameras are cheaper and are ideal for photographer / videographers (those who do both). They allow amateurs / freelancers / wedding videographers to get a great "cinema-like" video image with a consumer / reasonably priced camera. They're also smaller and lighter, and the lenses are often cheaper and more readily available. But yeah. Those professionals who work mainly in video will usually invest in a cinema camera. No overheating, but costs more.
I find it kind of incredible that given the price of some of these new mirrorless cameras, overheating would still be a thing. -_- - Thank you for the video!
Such an amazing quality on your channel. Good information! Thank you ❤️
Thank you!
This is a great video! I am having trouble with a camera shutting down during photo booth sessions so i am going to try a couple of these suggestions.
Glad it helped!
Can you please tell me what features I should turn off if Im recording still videos at home and Im using canon EOS R50 . Thanks in advance ❤
Love your presentations. This was another good one!
Thanks, Alan! I appreciate it. :)
Great video! Thank you 🙏🏾
Sure thing!
I was going to do an outdoor still photo shoot with my Canon R6 on a hot evening and the camera froze up. No viewing on the rear screen and no response from pressing any buttons. Called Canon repair and they suggested that I send it in for repair. After not hearing from them, I got through to a phone support person who found my camera's repair order (I didn't know if it safely arrived). All they would tell me is that I need to pay $425 so that a technician could be assigned. I had no choice but to pay over the phone. A side note. In doing wedding photography for years (many hot days) using 5D series bodies, I never had a camera melt down.
Ugh. That sucks.
Really helpful, Thank You🧡🧡🧡
Glad it helped!
i always see ur videos ur great keep going do not stop .
Thanks, Mechail!
For my Canon R7 & R10 I stop shooting 4k to 1080p which never overheats. Great Video! Cheers!
I haven't used my camera for about a month. When I tried to turn it on after charging the battery, it says overheated. Shutting down
Practically shoot in APS-C mode. There's no overheating at all on R5.
what is asp c mode
@@Lineage2ErtheiaPvPimage cropping mode
So many restrictions, just face it, mirrorless and DSLR just not meant for video work. Bring back the camcorders.
Ha! Well, they'e getting there. Slowly but surely...
Camcorder won't give you a cinematic quality. Most of them have a small sensor and no interchangeable lens. I tried all kinds of them, from middle-class Panasonic to professional Sony. Good for documentaries or TV style shows, never work for music clip or any creative video
@@ShlomoNizin The problem i face is my unstable shaky hands, unimaginative and non-creativity. I have not reached the stage where the cam matters .... well it matters if i cannot record a video continuously for up to 30 minutes without overheating though.
@Unteroffizier You can't get a good image with a smaller sensor. Even with the best hands in the world. Also, you can buy a newer camera without any limitations in video shooting or use the older cameras with some tricks. I'm doing shooting with 3 Canon cameras. Every camera has an intervalometer that starts the video recording again after it stops. So it's virtually unlimited. At least one camera will shoot at the time that another will restart.
You won't find a movie or musical clip shooted on a mid-priced camcorder. But there are millions of them shooted on DSLR or mirrorless camera. I would go for inconvenience to win the quality
@@ShlomoNizin I will need to work on my hands and creativity. Once i have these issues solved, then i look for a suitable camera.
I cant even keep the battery slot open cuz then the camera wont turn on it have to be closed
Yes, this is the case with some cameras...
@@diyfwmb yeah i just got three extra batteries to switvh out and a mini fan i stream for 10 plus hours so im tryna make sure it dont overheat
This does not stop your camera from overheating it just postpones it...
Yes, sometimes. But it stops it in most cases.
Yea got the canon 7d... and it happens to me to XD
🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
Just buy a Panasonic and quit worrying about it. OR buy a Nikon. That's right a Nikon! Not just for stills. Canon and Sony need to build better.
Lol, I hear you. I've been shooting on the Nikon Z6 lately, and it's quite nice.
@@diyfwmbI think that for wedding work, the high end Nikons are the way to go. Fabulous batteries, amazing glass and those massive sensors are sensual?? They're capable at least. So you have a camera that won't run out of battery too quickly and die, won't overheat and die and will shoot incredible stills and video whenever where-ever. Even an old Panasonic Lumix GH5, although and not really built for stills as a priority, is still so much better than a Canon for wedding work; just because its reliable.
I own Nikon, Canon and Sony Mirrorless Cameras and they do overheat in hot Texas weather. I found that downscaling your 4k to 1080p dramatically reduces the chances of overheating. The tips in this video is excellent.
Why do people insist on using these cameras for video? Camcorders were built for recording ours an hours of video with no overheating
True. However, mirrorless cameras are cheaper and are ideal for photographer / videographers (those who do both). They allow amateurs / freelancers / wedding videographers to get a great "cinema-like" video image with a consumer / reasonably priced camera. They're also smaller and lighter, and the lenses are often cheaper and more readily available.
But yeah. Those professionals who work mainly in video will usually invest in a cinema camera. No overheating, but costs more.
The most important recommendation - don't buy Canon !