I have an 11 month old 60D. About 4 weeks ago I used the camera for a photo shoot, took out the SD card, downloaded the pics and when I inserted it back, the camera brought up 'Card write protected'. I took out the card and confirmed that the write protect switch was not on write protect. I re-inserted the card and same message! In short I tried three different makes of SD cards and still got the same message so I took the camera to the local Canon rep.
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I must say I was treated very professionally and after a week I got a call that the camera was ready for collection. The whole card reader and PCB were completely replaced at no charge as the camera is still under warrenty. Apperently the micro switch in the reader had failed.As an after thought, a friend of mine suggested I use micro SD cards and just take out the micro SD from the adaptor, something that I have now taken to.Good luck with your repair. Hi thanks, yes it looks like an Inherent fault on the 60d card reader.I can not believe they would be so stupid to use a reader with a card locked switch when the card can be locked in the camera, why on earth would someone need a card lock slider detector? I've sent two DSLR's to Canon this year due to failed USB ports. Canon fixed these, but recommended pulling the memory cards in the future.
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They said the USB port wasn't designed to be used that frequently, which I find to be total BS.I have many other USB devices including Cell Phones, Canon Powershots, USB sticks, USB Hard Drives, USB Card Readers, etc. That get plugged in and un-plugged all of the time. I've never had a USB port fail, except on the two Canon DSLR's. Both were about three months old, when the ports failed.
The failures happened a few months apart.I now pull the memory cards from my DSLR's and use a reader. I know many people prefer this method, but I hate it. It's extra steps for me. The extra speed of my USB3 card reader doesn't make up for the extra manual steps that I now need to go through to transfer my pictures.Canon definitely has some reliability issues/weaknesses when it comes to their interface ports.In this case you're damned if you do and damned if you don't. Pcb62wrote:I've sent two DSLR's to Canon this year due to failed USB ports. Canon fixed these, but recommended pulling the memory cards in the future.
They said the USB port wasn't designed to be used that frequently, which I find to be total BS.Canon definitely has some reliability issues/weaknesses when it comes to their interface ports.In this case you're damned if you do and damned if you don't.What model Canon DSLRs had the failed ports? Not a 7D, I hope!-YogiWhen you get down to the nuts and bolts of photography, the results depend on the 'nut' behind the camera!See the 'Gear List' in my 'Profile' for my current equipment.Check out WilbaW's beginner FAQs at. Hey just wanted to let everyone know. I have had a Cannon 60D camera. I have a shoot on Saturday.
I was erasing sd card when I started getting message card write protected. Tried everything to get rid of message. Started to do research on google. Thought I was going to have to take it in to be fixed. Someone out there had the problem that I did and said the were at a beach taking photo.
That was my last shoot. Long story short.
![Micro Micro](https://cdn.inwepo.co/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/01150838/Cara-Mengetahui-Keaslian-Micro-SD-di-Android-inwepo-300x180.jpg)
I blew out my sd card slot with can of air. I put in sd cards immediately after. Worked like a charm. PROBLEM FIXED. I was about ready to switch to a Nikon. Hope this helps other people and saves a fix it charge.