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i have a sony DSC-P72 3.2mp digital camera thats having a major breakdown. it wont go on at all. ive gone through several sets of BRAND NEW batteries, theres no lock on it, but im having no luck getting it to stay on. the green power light flashes once and nothing happens after that.

2007-01-10 05:29:55 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Consumer Electronics Cameras

2 answers

Sounds like it is shot.I can get you a sony cyber-shot dsc p200 7.2 megapixles for $110 gauranteed http://search.ebay.com/_W0QQfgtpZ1QQfrppZ25QQsassZtmerring64

2007-01-10 05:36:59 · answer #1 · answered by tmerring64 2 · 0 0

Normal alkaline batteries just don't do it for digital cameras because of the high instantaneous current required to run a digital camera. (This includes all batteries such as "Duracell" and "Super Heavy Duty" etc) These types of batteries will appear to the camera to be flat even when they aren't because they just don't have the capacity to give the camera what it wants.

Some places still sell rechargeable Nickel Cadmium Batteries (NiCd), and these batteries cannot cut it for digital cameras. There are also rechargeable alkaline batteries and these aren't great either.

The only type of rechargeable to get is Nickel Metal Hydride (NiMH), and the higher capacity the better. This capacity is typically rated in milliamp hours. A medium capacity battery for a camera will have say 1600 MAH whereas a high capacity battery will have more than 2000 MAH. Some even go as high as 2600 MAH. Get the highest that you can.

One downside is that NiMH batteries go flat in the camera if you do not use them. In a camera that uses 2 batteries, this can happen in as little as a week.

My advice is get a couple of sets of high capacity NiMH rechargeable batteries (2000 MAH or higher) and use these as much as possible. Also however buy one or two sets of Lithium batteries (non rechargeable) these last a long time but are wickedly expensive. Have one set of lithiums for backup in case you need the shot but the rechargeables are all flat. Soon as you can put freshly recharged batteries in and again keep the lithiums in reserve. Unused lithium batteries will last for years.

Hope this helps.

2007-01-10 17:10:38 · answer #2 · answered by teef_au 6 · 1 0

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