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I am pretty interested in recognizing any damage to digital camera in very low level (without any advanced tests).

For example, how can I identify the damage of a sensor or lens? If there are any ways to identify that the camera was dropped or physically damaged. I am pretty sure we can say it based on photo, or may be camera has any kind of sensor.

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Unless there is obvious or visible damage or dysfunction, minor issues can be quite hard to determine. You can severely compromise the front element of a lens and it will still mostly work. However a scratch on a rear element will be much more noticeable. But you can have dust in a lens or camera body with little or no noticeable effects.

If you have the ability to see images produced by a lens or camera body you can look for some things such as dark spots, which may indicate dust or dirt on the lens, or banding which may indicate some deeper malfunction. For a lens, the most common problems show up as poor focus, or uneven focus across an image.

If you are asking before you buy, just make sure you have some reasonable amount of trust in who you are purchasing from. In general, photography equipment holds up very well, if taken reasoanble care of.

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You can test the image formation against problems at small apertures against the sky or a white wall, where scratches and dust appear the sharpest.

Here you see wall images from a canon 85mm 1.8 I got from ebay with chips in the front element at 4 different apertures:

 F4 F8 

F11 F16

I can basically only use this portrait lens from F1.8 to F4. Then a spot appears in the upper left corner. At F11 - F22 there's up to 8 spots.

chips in the front element

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  • \$\begingroup\$ Usually you cannot see marks on the first optical element as distinctive feature in the final image at all, - however, they can diminish overall quality. Your spots do behave as if they are on the sensor, they are more distinct with smaller aperture, owing to the fact of parallelisation of the incident light, being able to project the particles contours onto the photosensitive sites. If you still have the body and lens (4 years after it was written), you could check with another lens at closed aperture. \$\endgroup\$
    – kamuro
    Commented Sep 26, 2016 at 9:01
  • \$\begingroup\$ This might be a fat dust. How can you tell it's sensor damage ? Furthermore, sensor is behind several filters: how do you distinguish if it's the IR filter or the sensor ? \$\endgroup\$
    – Soleil
    Commented Apr 16, 2018 at 21:47
  • \$\begingroup\$ it is only this lens \$\endgroup\$ Commented Jun 28, 2018 at 11:21
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If the lens is producing same bad image or doesn't function properly on different bodies, then the lens is damaged.

If the body is producing same bad image with different lenses, then the sensor/other-body-part is damaged

simple :)

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A belated answer, but I recently bought a camera that showed no signs of a problem until I tried to make a video. Then the camera would randomly exhibit a 'blinking' of the picture, is the best way I can explain it. Not quite the same as dropped frames, but rather a long, slow 3 seconds blink. After sending the Canon d760 away for professional repair, the camera came back with a clean bill of health ... no charge. Puzzled, I tried just about everything in the book, SD card, battery and eventually found the cause to be a lens. Of all things, who would think a faulty lens's electrics would interfere with the operating system of a camera? This was proven beyond doubt, with a repeatability of 100%. No damage could be detected with the naked eye, but under high magnification, one could see that the lens had been dropped. I guess buying anything second hand is a risky business.

Taking single shots would never have brought this problem to light, but think about it ... when a camera is making a video, it is taking 25 pictures or more every single second. So, I would say that this is a good way to test for problems. You should run the camera in video mode for several minutes.

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