rapairing 300d broken submirror

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How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel http://www.lotek.nu/misc/EOS_300D_sub-mirror_repair/ 1 of 17 28-6-2007 20:40 How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel Download this page as a single zipfile (1912 kB) . By: Tobbe Arnesson Contact: tobbe [at] happymtb [dot] org (I don't know anything about other camera models and to be frank, all I know about this one is written below). If you have a different camera or a different problem, try asking at some forum. This one is pretty good: http://www.dpreview.com/forums/ Written and fixed: 2006-07-15 Disclaimer: I take no responsibility for what might happen if you follow these steps. Your warranty will be shoot and if you screw up, you're to blame. This is just a documentation of what worked for me. Inspirational sites: 300D repair adventure and Canon Digital Rebel (300D) Modification . None of these are complete and left much to be solved during the operation. Preface It's not uncommon that the sub-mirror assembly on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel brakes after everything from 10.000 to 50.000 shots (I got 23.000 out of mine). This is due to a plastic pin snapping (not visible from the outside, even with the lens off the camera). It is possible to send the camera to Canon for repair. The cost is usually something like US $200. Considering what a new camera body costs this is not a cheap option for an old camera. If you're camera is still under warranty Canon should repair it for free since it's a design fault on their part. How to diagnose the problem All of your shots look like this (note: in some flash/sync combinations a similar phenomena can occur): This is due to the sub-mirror blocking the CCD, causing a dark area on the photos. Removing the lens and lifting the mirror carefully by hand, one can note that the sub-mirror wont close into the main mirror. The sub-mirror is used by the auto focus and should fold into the main mirror when it lifts out of the way.

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Guide for Repairing 300D broken submirror

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  • How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel http://www.lotek.nu/misc/EOS_300D_sub-mirror_repair/

    1 of 17 28-6-2007 20:40

    How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / RebelDownload this page as a single zipfile (1912 kB).

    By: Tobbe Arnesson

    Contact: tobbe [at] happymtb [dot] org (I don't know anything about other camera models and to be frank, all I know about this one is writtenbelow). If you have a different camera or a different problem, try asking at some forum. This one is pretty good: http://www.dpreview.com/forums/

    Written and fixed: 2006-07-15

    Disclaimer: I take no responsibility for what might happen if you follow these steps. Your warranty will be shoot and if you screw up, you're toblame. This is just a documentation of what worked for me.

    Inspirational sites: 300D repair adventure and Canon Digital Rebel (300D) Modification. None of these are complete and left much to be solvedduring the operation.

    Preface

    It's not uncommon that the sub-mirror assembly on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel brakes after everything from 10.000 to 50.000 shots (I got 23.000 outof mine). This is due to a plastic pin snapping (not visible from the outside, even with the lens off the camera). It is possible to send the camera toCanon for repair. The cost is usually something like US $200. Considering what a new camera body costs this is not a cheap option for an oldcamera. If you're camera is still under warranty Canon should repair it for free since it's a design fault on their part.

    How to diagnose the problem

    All of your shots look like this (note: in some flash/sync combinations a similar phenomena can occur):

    This is due to the sub-mirror blocking the CCD, causing a dark area on the photos. Removing the lens and lifting the mirror carefully by hand, onecan note that the sub-mirror wont close into the main mirror. The sub-mirror is used by the auto focus and should fold into the main mirror whenit lifts out of the way.

  • How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel http://www.lotek.nu/misc/EOS_300D_sub-mirror_repair/

    2 of 17 28-6-2007 20:40

    The sub-mirror can be flipped into the main mirror by hand

  • How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel http://www.lotek.nu/misc/EOS_300D_sub-mirror_repair/

    3 of 17 28-6-2007 20:40

    After doing that you can use the camera but the auto focus wont work (setting the focus manually works fine and the camera works just likenormal in manual mode).

    Fixing the problem

    The camera can by fixed. It's not an easy operation and requires some skills with small screws, patience, even more patience and some good luck.But what do you have to loose, the cameras busted anyway (unless you feel you can live without auto focus, in that case, just glue the mirrorstogether and live with it).

    Here are the tools needed for the job:

    Needle, glue, small flat screwdriver, long thin small phillips screwdriver (not like the one pictured), paper clip, magnet, tweezers (for aligningscrews), wire cutter and needle nose pliers (last two items not pictured)

  • How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel http://www.lotek.nu/misc/EOS_300D_sub-mirror_repair/

    4 of 17 28-6-2007 20:40

    You also need good discipline when it comes to taking the camera apart, placing the screws in an order you can later reverse. Don't forget witchscrew goes where, they are of different length and threading. There are close to 30 screws in total.

    Let's begin with the disassembly

    Note: All left/right-directions are made on the assumption that you hold the camera just like during normal operation, facing away from you. Thatis, looking at the back of the camera.

    1) Start the camera and make the flash unit pop-up. Do not close it again during the disassembly, if you do you wont be able to remove the frontcover of the camera (trust me, I found out the hard way).

    2) Remove the lens, the viewfinder piece, CF-card, main battery and back-up battery. If you have the shoulder strap mounted remove that too.

  • How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel http://www.lotek.nu/misc/EOS_300D_sub-mirror_repair/

    5 of 17 28-6-2007 20:40

    3) Turning to the left side of the camera, remove the screws pictured. Note that the top screw is longer than the bottom one.

    4) On the back of the camera, carefully pry the screw cover loose with the needle. Then unscrew the screw behind it.

  • How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel http://www.lotek.nu/misc/EOS_300D_sub-mirror_repair/

    6 of 17 28-6-2007 20:40

    5) Turning to the bottom of the camera, unscrew the three identical screws marked with arrows.

    6) Under the lid for the CF-card, locate and unscrew the two identical screws. These are slightly longer.

    7) Now, carefully remove the back cover from the rest of the camera. There is a flat cable going from the black and gray information LCD-panel,lift the lock on the connector and take this cable out from the circuit board. The picture shows the connector unlocked. Just lift the black/brown

  • How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel http://www.lotek.nu/misc/EOS_300D_sub-mirror_repair/

    7 of 17 28-6-2007 20:40

    part with a small screwdriver and then pull the cable straight out.

    8) On my camera, the silver rim with the "Sony"-marking around the large color LCD came loose and stuck with the back cover of the camera. Ifthis happens for you too, repair that part assembly before you continue. From bottom up it should be the white backlight, a black plastic rim, theLCD itself and lastly the silver rim.

    9) Now it's time to remove the front cover. Turn to the right side of the camera and remove the three screws. They're all the same.

  • How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel http://www.lotek.nu/misc/EOS_300D_sub-mirror_repair/

    8 of 17 28-6-2007 20:40

    10) Turning to the bottom, remove the four screws. The single one on the front is longer then the three others, who are identical.

    11) Now unscrew the two screws on the front right under the flash. These two are slightly longer and identical.

    12) Now look inside the battery compartment. Towards the front there are two screws (identical). These little buggers took me some time tolocate. With a long thin phillips screwdriver inserted from the back you can unscrew these. My screwdriver was a little to thick but some mildbending got it where it needed to be.

  • How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel http://www.lotek.nu/misc/EOS_300D_sub-mirror_repair/

    9 of 17 28-6-2007 20:40

    13) Now slide the hinge on the battery hatch away and lift the hatch off. Cool feature! :)

    14) Unscrew the hinge base. Note that there is a difference between the left and right side (different spacing between the holes and edges) so payattention when reassembling this one (you can't go wrong). The screws are identical.

    15) Now all screws holding the front cover are removed. With gentle force, lift the bottom away from the tripod mounting hole and lift the frontcover off the camera. No cables are attached between the cover and the rest of the camera. Thankfully!

  • How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel http://www.lotek.nu/misc/EOS_300D_sub-mirror_repair/

    10 of 17 28-6-2007 20:40

    16) Okay, that was the easy part. Now let's move the top cover a bit from the camera. This ones attached with quite a few wires and flat cables butno soldering required! Start with removing the two flat cables from the top left corner, looking at the back of the camera. Just lift the brown hingesand pull the cables out. Make sure both of these come back to the outside when putting the camera back together One of them escaped insidethe top cover for me costing me some additional fiddling.

    17) Remove the long screw on the top right.

  • How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel http://www.lotek.nu/misc/EOS_300D_sub-mirror_repair/

    11 of 17 28-6-2007 20:40

    18) Remove the two (identical) screws next to the view finder and the dioptri screw too (unscrews just like a normal screw).

    19) Locate the black tape on the right front side of the camera and pull it loose at the top. You can leave it stuck on the bottom if you want. This isjust to give the wires more room to move around as we lift the top cover off the camera.

    20) Carefully dislodge the top cover straight up. You cant remove it fully but you can move it a few mm upwards. Then unscrew the two identicalmini-screws holding the shoulder strap mount on the left side and then remove the shoulder strap mount.

  • How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel http://www.lotek.nu/misc/EOS_300D_sub-mirror_repair/

    12 of 17 28-6-2007 20:40

    21) Find the two identical screws that hold the circuit board on the front of the left side of the camera. One is quite obvious (not pictured) and theother is hiding a bit. Also note that there are two pins, one next to each screw. These help holding the circuit board in place but when moving thecircuit board you need to work with them.

    22) Now you need to move the circuit board away from the camera. Moving it towards the top and at the same time moving the top cover away isthe way to go. Be really careful here, the big capacitor holds something like 220 volts (measured) even though the batteries have been away fromthe camera for quite some time. Try not to short-circuit anything with that voltage! You might loose a circuit board here so pay attention to whatyou are doing. To make matters worse it's a really hard task to move the circuit board out of the way. On the picture below I have marked thethree main problem areas. Moving the circuit board into this location is the best way to move it out of the way. I almost went mad during this step.

  • How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel http://www.lotek.nu/misc/EOS_300D_sub-mirror_repair/

    13 of 17 28-6-2007 20:40

    23) Congratulations! You have now successfully located the problem zone and can actually start the repair of your camera! The culprit sits wherethe green arrow indicates.

    24) Taking a closer look, this is what you find. This is the pin. There is no obvious way to remove the broken pin from the mirror housing.

  • How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel http://www.lotek.nu/misc/EOS_300D_sub-mirror_repair/

    14 of 17 28-6-2007 20:40

    25) With the needle, trace the ring around the pin. This loosens up the glue that attaches the pin to the mirror housing. After that, carefully pry thepin away from the mirror housing using a small flat head screwdriver. Someone actually managed to come this far only to drive the screwdriverinto the mirror housing totally wrecking the camera. Learn from him/her.

    26) After some careful bending, the pin gets loose from the mirror housing. Note that the glue is quite gooey and not of the hard kind.

  • How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel http://www.lotek.nu/misc/EOS_300D_sub-mirror_repair/

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    27) Here you can see the broken "pin". The actual pin has broken away from the base and is nowhere to be found. When Canon repairs thecamera they replace this part with a metal one. Let's do the same, shall we?

    28) Straighten a normal metal office clip and insert it into the hole in the mirror housing. Let the mirror be in it's normal down position. Hold thepin and try flipping the mirror up and down with your finger. Note that the sub-mirror now moves with the main mirror. That's the ticket. Whenyou find a optional amount of paper clip penetration, take a marker pen and draw on the paper clip. This way you know how long the protrudingpin needs to be.

  • How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel http://www.lotek.nu/misc/EOS_300D_sub-mirror_repair/

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    29) Now start bending the clip into something with a base and a protruding pin, there is no need to worry about clearance towards the circuitboard - lot's of space there. When you feel satisfied, cut the clip down and try it in the camera. The mirrors should move around freely and thesub-mirror fold into and out of the main mirror.

    30) Place the new pin into the mirror housing and put a drop of some thick glue onto it (I used Epoxy resin, a glue gun might work too). Make surethe clip does not float in the glue, it should be flat to the mirror housing. Just like when you confirmed it's operation. If you use a loose/runningglue it might find it's way down to the mirrors, not good.

  • How to repair broken sub-mirror on Canon EOS 300D / Rebel http://www.lotek.nu/misc/EOS_300D_sub-mirror_repair/

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    31) Check that the mirrors are moving so that you did not make the clip to long or short and that no glue found it's way to the mirror hinges. I gotlucky! :) When all seems to be working, it's time to reassemble the camera. Just start scrolling back on this page step by step. When remounting theback cover, make sure the sensor for the CF-card bay door is free to move. Not focused picture below. After the full assembly the camera shouldwork just like normal again. It worked first try for me but you might need to go back and re-seat some of the flat cables.