#FUJIFILM SHUTTER COUNT MANUAL#
Because most people use aperture priority to control DoF and probably to gain a smoother background blur, chances are good Fuji decided to limit the shutter speed farther to mitigate the effect on the bokeh, while still granting access to the faster shutter speeds in Manual (where any camera lets you shoot yourself in the foot all you want) and shutter priority, where it's safe to assume that the shooter prizes a faster shutter speed more than the quality of the bokeh, but they warn you about the exposure issue. On this dial, the number 1 represents the slowest shutter speed one-second, and the number 4000 represents the fastest shutter speed, 1/4000s of a second. Most of the Fujifilm X Series cameras have a physical shutter speed dial on the top of the camera. You can get a (possibly incorrect) ballpark figure from the default file/folder numbering system though. Find Shutter Count of your FUJIFILM Camera - YouTube. Dpreview's detailed review on the X100 shows this effect very clearly. The Fujifilm X-T1 and X-T2 both technically have shutter actuation recording, but some disruption from firmware updates has rendered the EXIF shutter count figure unreliable. In M and shutter priority modes, Fuji is allowing the faster shutter speeds with only a partially opened aperture anyway, but at the detriment to background blur (the bokeh becomes choppier) and accuracy of exposure.
Speaking practically, your best bet is to simply examine the camera and use your best judgement about the condition. And there is some gray area regarding shutter actuations vs actual photos taken. The wider the aperture is open, the slower the shutter speed has to be to accommodate the operation speed of the leaf shutter. But a full factory reset will start the frame counter over at 0001, so even that 6000 number is not totally reliable. The leaf shutter can only travel so quickly.
This is actually a characteristic of the leaf shutter used in Fuji's X10/X20/X30 and X100 cameras.