I am a photographer on the side in addition to my day job. This weekend I shot a concert for charity and mainly because I have a few friends in one of the bands that was playing. So I spent yesterday afternoon shooting the event, and last night "making" the final edits to the photos and getting all the post processing done. Also it was a sad day, upon opening my gear bag at the start of the event I found my SB-900 (Nikon strobe) battery compartment had white crust all over it, a battery had exploded for whatever reason. I normally empty it out after every shoot, but apparently I left them in there, and left the thing on like an idiot. Cleaned it up, tried some new batteries, but she wouldn't fire up. And since it wasn't a wedding or paid gig I didn't bother to drag my backup gear along, so I had to shoot without a flash. Not really a problem as non-flash shots look the best at concerts, but the strobe is good for the safety shots if the lighting of the venue is piss poor. Stupid mistake from a shoot I did the previous weekend seems to have cost me my main flash. :(
Yeah, it was weird, and it was brand new batteries as of a week ago for another concert I shot. I think the reason it happened is because I left the strobe in the on position. It goes into sleep, but think it was still trickle-draining the batteries and when they ran out of juice and it was still drawing they probably got hot and burst or just burst for other reasons. Two of the four AA batteries in it were bubbled up on their ends and seemed to have leaked. Won't make that mistake again. I leave my batteries in my SB-600 all the time and have had that strobe for going on 6 or 7 years now. SB-600 is my backup strobe, and it's an awesome strobe to have. Think I'm going to get a 910 to replace my 900... but going to see if I can possibly fix the 900, but my guess it's dead for good. :( Good to know there are other Nikon shooters on Hubski!
Sometimes batteries will have some sort of guarantee about exploding and ruining your electronics. Might be worth checking out. And yea, haven't shot as much lately as I'd like to. But I keep saying I'll get back into it soon. The constant rain and overcast weather in Vancouver doesn't make for super interesting shots.
Yeah, planning on looking into that, and also calling my insurance agent to see if there is any coverage there. I bought the thing when it was brand new and it was almost $700 at the time... so a small deductible might be worth it. I have a specific amended plan under my home insurance policy for my photography gear as I use it for a side photo business. I have some gear I use for my personal shots and walk-around photography (D80/SB600 and some cheaper lenses) that isn't really covered except under my "general" home policy, then I have another set of gear that I really only use for pro/paid gigs and that is the stuff that is all covered under my extended plan just for those specific items. All my pro-grade glass from Nikkor/Sigma, my SB900, my D700/300, etc. But I'm definitely looking at the battery company (Duracell) and I saved the batteries that exploded if they are needed. I think I'll be able to get a check out of my insurance company fairly easily, but I've never had to make a claim under it yet so we'll see. I hear that. I live in Minnesota, so same for me. My walk-around personal stuff has been innactive since last summer. Only thing I've been doing photography-wise is concert gigs, which I don't mind, but I like outdoor stuff and walking around and shooting weddings, and all that stuff is limited to a window of only a few months here.Sometimes batteries will have some sort of guarantee about exploding and ruining your electronics. Might be worth checking out.
The constant rain and overcast weather in Vancouver doesn't make for super interesting shots.