Turn the metal unit over and see if there are threaded holes (which would indicate tightening from inside the camera) or sheared off screw heads sticking out. John Hoffman. Conway, NH. 1D X Mark III, Many lenses, Pixma PRO-100, Pixma TR8620a, LR Classic. 0 Likes. Reply. I had the metal part of the hot shoe come loose on a 6D mkII. Simple 5 methods to fix your Canon DSLR.1. Battery switch slot2. Open all slots and keep it overnight3. Try another battery or lens4. P Mode shutter for 15 s Are you sure it isn't on? A couple of times I have bumped some buttons somewhere and managed to blacken out the LCD screen, and the camera did not seem to be really "on". Because I never use live view, it was confusing enough for me anyway.
Return it and get the D850 or A9. It sounds like one of those is what you'd prefer, and you won't really be happy with a Canon now. Just make the switch. Do, of course, note that those two cameras cost a great deal more than the 6D2, so it's not at all surprising their specs are "incredible" and "amazing" by comparison. Enjoy Hawaii!
Solution. If you turn on the power switch and the Date/Time/Zone setting screen appears, set the Date/Time/Zone. Turning on the power. Solution. The quickest way to check if this is the issue causing your Canon camera to show a ‘busy’ signal is to turn the flash off. If you turn flash off and your Canon Rebel camera no longer shows the ‘busy’ message then the recycling time is likely to be the issue at hand. There are things that affect the recycling time. It does not appear until you switch the camera to Live View mode. Let's leave remote shooting out of the equation for the moment. The camera itself can fire a Canon Speedlite in Live View mode. It does not seem to matter if Exp.Sim. Is set or not. It does not seem to matter which "Silent LV Shooting" mode setting is selected, either. atKPi.