A couple of days ago, I turned on my Pentax Optio 555. The lens
didn't extend, but the camera chirped once, the LCD lit up briefly
with the "Optio" logo, and then shut off after about a second. I
charged the battery, with the same result
Is it dead? Or can I resuscitate it myself? I'm assuming that by
now, it's not worth having repaired professionally, since a
replacement would cost less and have more features.
"wkasimer" <wkasimer@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:1182955440.212732.168960@n60g2000hse.googlegr oups.com...
>A couple of days ago, I turned on my Pentax Optio 555. The lens
> didn't extend, but the camera chirped once, the LCD lit up briefly
> with the "Optio" logo, and then shut off after about a second. I
> charged the battery, with the same result
>
> Is it dead? Or can I resuscitate it myself? I'm assuming that by
> now, it's not worth having repaired professionally, since a
> replacement would cost less and have more features.
>
> Thanks -
>
> Bill
Are you sure the battery is still good? When you turn the camera off and on
again, does it do the same thing? Or does it not do anything at all?
If it doesn't do anything at all until you recharge the battery, and then
does the same thing just once, and then you have to recharge the battery
again, I would suspect that the battery may have gone bad. Either that, or
there might be a short somewhere in the camera that's draining the battery.
You'd think it'd pop a error code up wonder if it's worth trying a different set of batteries just incase they are not holding a full charge.
Don't know why but someone brought me a camera once.... being a electronic engineer folks think you can fix everything..... first thing I did was to try a brand new set of batteries in, lo and behold it worked after I tried various set's
Funny thing is it was quite fussy which batteries it had in, I tried a couple of different brands, it was a Olympus I can recall but don't ask which model.
One point you may be aware of is that the ol' LCD draws a fair amount of current because of the backlight, one good test is to try it with the LCD off if you have a viewfinder that is.
Another point to bear in mind due to the heavy current demanded by the backlight on the viewfinder you only need dirty battery contacts, due to the current this could cause it to become a 'resistive' connection causing the voltage to drop... worth bearing in mind.
Best I can do I'm afraid until someone with greater knowledge come's along.