Interchangable sensor camera?

carguy

Senior Member
The big camera companies get criticized fairly often for failing to innovate, but Nikon at least has been giving us a lot to write about recently in the patent department. Case in point: the Japanese company has just filed a patent for a camera that will allow you to swap out, not lenses, but sensors.

Of course, this isn’t a new idea. Medium format cameras have allowed photographers to switch out backs since the film days. What is new is that Nikon is thinking of doing this in a DSLR-style body if the diagrams are to be trusted.

More: Nikon Files Patent for an Interchangeable Sensor Camera
 

BackdoorArts

Senior Member
Given the amount of electronics that go with the sensor, it's going to either require an extreme bit of standardization, or the ability/necessity to upgrade firmware with each swap. For a company that has shown that it can't manage to standardize even menu order from one camera to the next this is a huge leap.

It's just a patent, so I suspect it's years away.
 

WhiteLight

Senior Member
Its probably something that'll help Nikon during servicing and repairs and not necessarily for the end user.
People already have issues just cleaning the sensor, imagine if through have an option to pull the damn thing off..
 

Marcel

Happily retired
Staff member
Super Mod
GREAT, this way people afflicted with the OIL and DUST problems can wash the sensor in the dishwasher. :)
 
GREAT, this way people afflicted with the OIL and DUST problems can wash the sensor in the dishwasher. :)

When I worked at the TV station we had an idiot Master Controller who worked the late night shift all by himself. He was known to drink cokes and sit the coke on the switcher. The switcher is the board that is used to route everything to the network. Think a panel that has 6 rows of about 50 switches per row.
Well one night he spilled the coke on the switcher. He tried to clean in up so it did not show when looking at the board and was successful. Two hours later the board quit working and the engineering staff was called im. I got there for my shift and live show at 4:30am to find everyone there and the station off the air. Luckily I knew how to route around the switcher and get us on the air.
I told all the engineers that they needed to remove the switcher and wash it as soon as possible and they all laughed at me. Two months later and they had been trying to clean it and they could not get replacement parts they finally got in touch with someone who had worked for the not defunct company that built it. His suggestion was to take the board out and wash it with as much filtered water as possible and then use a fan to dry it for a week. Do this as many times as necessary to get it clean. After about two weeks of cleaning the switcher was put back in and worked better than it had worked in years and I had the last laugh.
When I was in camera sales and photofinishing we used to suggest that when you dropped your camera in the ocean that you remove the battery first and then wash the camera off in clean water and then dry with a hair dryer.
I have not heard anyone talking about what ot do with the new digital cameras when they are dropped in the ocean. So what is the thoughts on this?
 

BackdoorArts

Senior Member
I have not heard anyone talking about what ot do with the new digital cameras when they are dropped in the ocean. So what is the thoughts on this?

Um....





Wait for it.....






Don't drop your camera in the ocean?!



rimshot_button.gif
 

fotojack

Senior Member
It's why cameras come with straps, and why other people sell straps of every description.....for those who forget or choose not to use them. ;)
 
Um....
Wait for it.....
Don't drop your camera in the ocean?!
rimshot_button.gif
Back in the days when I owned a camera store we would get two or three every summer that would drop their camera in the water at the beach. They would bring it back to us two weeks later and ask us to fix it. I would just go over the the new cameras and ask which one they would like, The rinse and rice would work about 50% of the time with the old film cameras.
 
Top