I am from the UK and I understand you enough to appreciate this video, people bashing your English speech are not worth listening to. Thank you for this demonstration video!
Omg Thx!! I just purchased a sl2, this was much helpful!! * born & raised in Texas. (I speak only English ) I understood you Really WELL, as well!! ((For the ones bashing to speak in your own language))
Thanks for the upload! Clear, concise, and easy to follow, I like the fact that you were showing the actual voltage reading with each step of the process. It assured me, that the DSLR won't get zapped.. lol Maraming salamat from Manila, Philippines
Effective communication is important. Language is no issue. Your video gave clear and precise explanation even a dumb person could understand.. Those who are bashing you for your bad English should be taking classes on effective communication first, Polished english speaking skills are secondary.. Well done bro, keep up with your good work.
I was wonder, if the External Battery is providing 9v to the camera, but the camera only needs 7.2v. you dont think it will fried the camera with time? (I'm not sure, I'm just asking)
I bought it for my Nikon D800 camera. Didn't work until I bought - Quick charge PowerBank (xiaomi 2C)! With normal charge speed PowerBank will work only with Nikon D7000. For all other compatible models (D810, 600, 610, 7100 ...) you will need Quick Charge PB. It cost aprox. 40 EUR.
Hello ive bought a powerbank with 20000mah from Anker. It has an output of 2,4A. Somehow when i use the camera the battery percentage drops. Ive recorded 3-4 minutes and it droped from 85 to 78%. Why? The powerbank is connected and the option for usb charging is enabled. Please help me out. Thanks!
I have Canon 750D and the same components as you, but I can't get pass the "check battery pack" error state. I tried to power off and on several times but it didn't work for me. I still need this equipment for timelapse shooting, what else can I do?
i have canon power shot sx130 is. Will it compatible with it ? on user manual of camera it says AC Adapter Kit ACK800 is required to power up the camera without battery.
I purchased one of these cheap couplers for my Nikon 7500. Ok at power on but displays an ERR on camera LCD monitor. Besides it goes blank as I push on shutter release button. Voltage on coupler 9.1v. Any help please??
Ditto with even Nikon's EP 5B adapter when attached to my D7000. Err report and then display goes blank. I did not use the 1 amps voltage boost usb cable. But used a DC to DC buck Boost module of 3 amps in between Power bank and coupler to boost the voltage from 5 V DC. I used 8.8 V instead of 9 V in output of the DC to DC converter that goes to battery coupler. I am puzzled. Local Nikon tech people could not help.
I would not risk damage to my cameras using something like that ! You need voltage and amperage safety circuits to protect camera. I clearly did not work from the start but should.
If anyone from Delhi and visit Chandni Chowk for those things please ask them for a Camera Unit... its starts from 3500/- per Unit there....If you order Online its 4500/- Per Unit. Please understand that different camera required different Unit.
@@thias1 I don't think that 9v is the right voltage for DSLRs... May be more like 8? Or even 7.5? What is the difference in products between reputable brand and not reputable? Also, powering it for too long is kind of the whole idea behind this build, if I didn't want to power it for too long why would I use a powe bank in the first place I would just use the battery... Do you possess any of that equipment, sir?
@@thias1 Thank you, sir. My Nikon battery I think when fully charged goes over 8 volts, and slowly discharges down to 7.2, it is possible if you put your DSLR on 7.2 constant power that the low baterry inticator will blink all the time... Video recording also automatically stops after 20min in 1080p24, but I can start it again immediately, probably I will never go for more than 2-3 hours though, only if it's like really long live event... Usually I do short takes but over a long periods of time, let's say full day of filming doing 5-10 min takes with breaks in between, so that the camera can chill. Do you think that 9v can lead the camera to overheat faster, sir? I have heard that the original Canon charger gives 8.4v to the camera.
somehow this doesnt work with my t6i . I tried with 3 different powerbanks, it does turn on the camera after a few attempts but shuts down after about 8 secs. DOnt know where the problem may be, any ideas? anybody?
Joke of the Year.... While if we do process our camara will collapsed in fraction of minutes.... Any way the DSLR needs the the potential Difference(Voltages) of 7. 4 volts. Good job... Nothing to say