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You can most likely find a universal cord for your camera for a cheaper price then the original cord. I would just caution not to buy a cheaper cord from a random website, but use a known website such as BestBuy or Walmart. I put a link below with an example for you!
These are frequently lost and are fashioned of purest unobtanium.
When mine disappeared I bought a non-working A2 on eBay very cheaply and carefully removed the old eyecup from it and glued it onto mine, it also had the benefit of providing spare body covers, a lens hood, battery and a strap. A cheaper alternative is to buy a non-original replacement, see item number 220440673814 on eBay, or search for seller birthdayboy; the eyecups he sells are good, but it looks ugly and gets in the way as it isn't flush with the back of the camera.
Don't re-sell the donor camera if you buy one: sooner or later you'll need the flexible circuit board from inside it, as the one in your camera WILL eventually fail to power the viewfinder lcd backlight. The old camera will serve to show you how to dismantle and repair your original one. It's one of those jobs which is so fiddly and time-consuming that a professional repair is totally uneconomic.
These are frequently lost and are fashioned of purest unobtanium.
When
mine disappeared I bought a non-working A2 on eBay very cheaply and
carefully removed the old eyecup from it and glued it onto mine, it
also had the benefit of providing spare body covers, a lens hood,
battery and a strap. A cheaper alternative is to buy a non-original
replacement, see item number 220440673814 on eBay, or search for seller
birthdayboy; the eyecups he sells are good, but it looks ugly and gets
in the way as it isn't flush with the back of the camera.
Don't re-sell the donor camera if you buy one: sooner
or later you'll need the flexible circuit board from inside it, as the
one in your camera WILL eventually fail to power the viewfinder lcd
backlight. The old camera will serve to show you how to dismantle and
repair your original one. It's one of those jobs which is so fiddly and
time-consuming that a professional repair is totally uneconomic.
either the batteries are bad or the camera is defective. I'd get a set of premium batteries (Non recharble-cheaper) and try the camera with it. If it still doesn't work then the camera is defective you can have it repaired or buy a new one.
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