Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
shanghaicameras.com presents the offline service information of Wang Zhijie, a local camera repair technician in Shanghai. Its positioning is very clear: repair and maintenance of cameras, lenses, and photographic equipment, along with the sale of both modern and antique second-hand camera gear. The page states that he has been working in camera repair since 1993, is particularly skilled with Tokina lenses, and became the only officially authorized Tokina engineer in mainland China in 2006.
The website itself is more like an online business card, offering a service overview, address, phone number, email, opening hours, and transport information. The actual services include repair and maintenance for digital cameras, film cameras, lenses, and small to large photographic equipment. It also sells second-hand and vintage equipment from brands such as Canon, Nikon, Mamiya, Leica, Rolleiflex, Voigtlander, Zeiss Ikon, Sony, and Contax. Its strength lies in offline repair experience and its location within the photography equipment market, rather than in online functionality.
The main content does not list repair prices, inspection fees, parts costs, warranty periods, or prices for second-hand equipment. Camera repair typically depends heavily on the brand, model, fault type, and parts availability, so this site should be regarded as operating on an “in-store or contact-for-quote” basis. Payment methods are also not disclosed.
The advantages are that the technician has substantial experience, the repair scope covers both digital and film equipment, and the shop is located in Shanghai Xingguang Photographic Equipment Market, making it suitable for users who need face-to-face communication, device inspection, and in-person pickup. Support for Chinese, Japanese, and basic English also makes it relatively friendly to foreign photography enthusiasts. The drawbacks are that the website is quite traditional and lacks online booking, repair progress tracking, pricing transparency, inventory listings, and clear after-sales terms. For users who want mail-in repair or online ordering, the available information is insufficient.
It is suitable for photography enthusiasts in Shanghai or those able to visit Shanghai, film camera users, vintage lens owners, Tokina lens users, and anyone looking for second-hand or retro camera equipment. For professional photographers, it may also serve as a local backup option for repairs.
Both the domain and services are aimed at the local Shanghai market, and the page content is simple, so it should normally be directly accessible from mainland China. Overall verdict: this is not a modern e-commerce platform, but rather a local photography repair service entry point whose credibility comes mainly from offline experience and word of mouth.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on shanghaicameras.com official site.
shanghaicameras.com is an China other provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 5.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach shanghaicameras.com directly.