

I just thought it was an interesting result and worth passing along. I even used the first one recently to provide shutter count on a camera that I was selling. I've used both of these sites before, but I've never compared them to each other. So it seems there's a bit of disparity among shutter count tools. That includes the actuations that happen when the shutter opens to use live view even if you don't take a shot and also when the shutter opens to allow taking movies. Be advised this doesn't count the number of images taken, it counts the number of shutter actuations. Sounds believable, and most of those, if not all, were mine. I have a Mac and use the app ShutterCheck to find shutter count.
#Exiftool mac shutter count how to#
So then I went to Apotelyt ( How to find the Shutter Count on my Fujifilm?), using the same image. Whaaa? Hardly seems possible, there's absolutely no sign of the camera having been handled at all. I went to this page: Image Display and uploaded a fresh image. Check Camera Shutter Count and Manufacture Date. It includes your photo metadata such as a shutter counter, camera, model, shutter speed, ISO, exposure, focal length, lens info, geo, and other photo editing manipulations. I enter a jpeg to get my shutter count Thank you very much. Check out 6 quick, easy and free ways to determine your Nikon shutter count.

ShutterCount displays the number of shutter actuations (the shutter count) of your Canon EOS. No big deal, everything else is there and I can't find a single sign of use on the camera. The original and only Mac shutter count reader that works with all new Canons.
#Exiftool mac shutter count manual#
Which is true, except for the fact that there's no user manual in the box. I bought it a week or so ago from B&H, used, rated 10 with the notation "can't be told from new". Shutter 'lives' are given as mean time to failure, theyre not guarantees, so theres not really any value in knowing the count - if half the shutters fail at 1 shot, and the other half fail at 299,999, then the mean time to failure is 150,000, but that figure wouldnt help you much without understanding the distribution of failures. But just out of curiosity, I decided to check the shutter count on my new GFX 50s II. Okay, I realize that shutter count isn't all that meaningful in these days of e-shutters and of cameras whose mechanical shutter is likely to last longer than I will anyway.
