If you have a battery grip from RP or R8, you put the original canon battery in first slot and de 3rd party on second slot so the camera can recognize both batterys as original and charge both of them at same time. be happy
Hi, can you provide some more details of this or better still a video demonstrating this? Is this a third party battery grip or a genuine Canon product and how is the charge power being supplied to the grip, is it via a connection on the grip itself, rather than the Canon R8's USB-C. i.e. is it entirely missing-out the Camera's circuitry?
@@hamradioop5777 i am using the Patona battery grip with two LP-E17 originals for canon RP and it works. First time using it i got a pop up on the screen, but nothing after that. I can also charge the batteries inside the grip via the usb c port on the camera. The only downside is that the acces to the SD card is restricted, but you can transfer your files via usb c also
Delighted it was of some use. I think that the Canon R8 is currently the bargain of full frame mirrorless cameras and its small size and weight is remarkable, I do wish however that Canon's lock-down to its own expensive camera batteries has not done them any favours.
Hello sir, In my case I connect my 20watt pd output power bank with my R8 by type c cable , and green light turns on but after I turned on my camera in display battery icon is white not gray, and i try to record video with connected power bank it's give me 57min video 1080p@59fps Can you please demonstrate this .. please help me sir
Thanks for this, though I'm not clear under what setup you got the camera to receive power while turned on and recording. Was that done with a specific PD charger? So when I plug my iphone USBC to USBC charger into the R8 and the battery light comes on but when I turn the camera on the battery icon remains while, that's because I lack a PD charger in this case. Does that sound right? Thanks.
I've done an off-camera experiment in an attempt to answer your question. I charged a genuine Canon battery, whilst it was inside the Canon R8, using the QBLOC PSU as mentioned in the video and using a USB-C to USB-C charging cable with built-in Watt meter. Specifically I charged the battery until camera's green LED extinguished and the power in Watts displayed zero. I then switched-on the camera and the camera's green light instantly extinguished. The camera's battery indicator switched-on (the level showed that it was full) and the USB-C watt meter showed 2 to 3 Watts. I started camera video recording and the Watt meter showed 5 to 6 Watts. I stopped camera recording and switched off the camera. The camera's LED did NOT light and the watts being used on the USB-C cable showed zero Watts. Although this is a PD capable charger and cable, PD only lit at the start of battery charging. My conclusion, rightly or wrongly, is that providing you have a PD capable USB-C PSU or Power Bank, that is 10 watts capable or higher and you have a suitable USB-C to USB-C charging cable, then it appears that you can run the camera from these external power sources without the genuine Canon battery going flat, providing the Mains doesn't fail or a Power Bank isn't exhausted.
As you can see in the video at 9:43, yes it does work providing that you are using a suitable USB-C to USB-C cable and that the powerbank has USB-C output.
Appreciate the upload, mate 👍 thanks for taking the time to do this video
If you have a battery grip from RP or R8, you put the original canon battery in first slot and de 3rd party on second slot so the camera can recognize both batterys as original and charge both of them at same time. be happy
Hi, can you provide some more details of this or better still a video demonstrating this? Is this a third party battery grip or a genuine Canon product and how is the charge power being supplied to the grip, is it via a connection on the grip itself, rather than the Canon R8's USB-C. i.e. is it entirely missing-out the Camera's circuitry?
@@hamradioop5777 i am using the Patona battery grip with two LP-E17 originals for canon RP and it works. First time using it i got a pop up on the screen, but nothing after that. I can also charge the batteries inside the grip via the usb c port on the camera. The only downside is that the acces to the SD card is restricted, but you can transfer your files via usb c also
Thanks a lot for this video, exactly what I was looking for :)
Delighted it was of some use. I think that the Canon R8 is currently the bargain of full frame mirrorless cameras and its small size and weight is remarkable, I do wish however that Canon's lock-down to its own expensive camera batteries has not done them any favours.
Hello sir,
In my case I connect my 20watt pd output power bank with my R8 by type c cable , and green light turns on but after I turned on my camera in display battery icon is white not gray, and i try to record video with connected power bank it's give me 57min video 1080p@59fps
Can you please demonstrate this .. please help me sir
Thanks for this, though I'm not clear under what setup you got the camera to receive power while turned on and recording. Was that done with a specific PD charger? So when I plug my iphone USBC to USBC charger into the R8 and the battery light comes on but when I turn the camera on the battery icon remains while, that's because I lack a PD charger in this case. Does that sound right? Thanks.
I've done an off-camera experiment in an attempt to answer your question. I charged a genuine Canon battery, whilst it was inside the Canon R8, using the QBLOC PSU as mentioned in the video and using a USB-C to USB-C charging cable with built-in Watt meter. Specifically I charged the battery until camera's green LED extinguished and the power in Watts displayed zero.
I then switched-on the camera and the camera's green light instantly extinguished. The camera's battery indicator switched-on (the level showed that it was full) and the USB-C watt meter showed 2 to 3 Watts. I started camera video recording and the Watt meter showed 5 to 6 Watts.
I stopped camera recording and switched off the camera. The camera's LED did NOT light and the watts being used on the USB-C cable showed zero Watts.
Although this is a PD capable charger and cable, PD only lit at the start of battery charging. My conclusion, rightly or wrongly, is that providing you have a PD capable USB-C PSU or Power Bank, that is 10 watts capable or higher and you have a suitable USB-C to USB-C charging cable, then it appears that you can run the camera from these external power sources without the genuine Canon battery going flat, providing the Mains doesn't fail or a Power Bank isn't exhausted.
so 18w powerbank with PD will do thew job? goint to try out. I tought i nedd 27w PD
As you can see in the video at 9:43, yes it does work providing that you are using a suitable USB-C to USB-C cable and that the powerbank has USB-C output.