![]() ![]() I kinda think they were making stuff up to fit a narrative. I have heard, recently, a story about a telescope eyepiece getting damaged, and possibly a camera, but the nature of the discussion was to warn people off of canned gas, and thusly I don't trust the honesty of the posts. In spite of the howls from the mewling kittens, and they will respond to this post, you can be sure of that, in nearly 50 years of using the stuff, almost 20 of which is with DSLR ownership, I have never damaged a piece of equipment. Frequent cleaning WILL damage the coatings on your lenses.įor routine dust removal on all my equipment I use canned gas. Thank you appreciate the Garibaldi wrote:ĭon't be an obsessive cleaner, especially with lenses. This reduces random particles from getting into the bulb when it's sitting as it seals and only opens when you compress the bulbĮven doing landscape shots and changing lenses in places like Mesa arch (where it's both sandy and windy at times) I've never found the need to really blow air into my camera, and still usually only need sensor cleaning twice per year.Īdvice duly noted. Just also make sure you get one with a stopper in the bottom. Don't get one with a brush on the end as that can trap dust and then you just blow it into the body (the brush is meant to removing dust spots if the blower portion doesn't help, but in reality, it makes it worse). ![]() But doing it after each lens change is obsessive, not needed, and can make it worse.ĪS to your question about which one to get, just get a decent quality one that's a blower bulb. I usually blow my sensor out every three months, but I do a fair amount of landscape photography and with that comes environmental elements. And if you have to, then shield the camera (as much as possible) from the wind or elements. ![]() Just exercise good technique and hold the camera down when changing lenses to avoid dust getting in there, and don't change lenses in adverse environments (windy conditions, sandy conditions, rain-obviously, etc). Blowing off your lenses after each change is OK but you don't need to blow off the sensor each time. I would maybe do it once every few months or as needed, but NOT after every lens change. You will likely make things worse doing it that often. What is the best lens blower to get ? I shoot a Sony A6k, and, as well as keeping dust off my lenses, would like to blow the sensor in between lens changes, or is that a no-no? If you get a nice juicy fingerprint or booger on a lens surface, use a clean microfiber cloth. Leave the sensor the heck alone unless you get dust specks showing up in photos. I've seen more lenses-and now sensors-damaged by obsessive cleaning than any other reason. remains to be seen if it available in the I've been a photojournalist for 40 years. I just want to get a good one, that minimises the risk. I would have use this twice, then, in that time. I have had two dust spots in the last 3 years. I use this: as it is filtered which seems sensible if costly. Don't muck about with routine cleaning, honestly. ![]() You can save the spotty images easily in processing. Lenses just need a micro fibre cloth most of the time and bits of dust generally don't show on the images.īlow dust off the sensor when you can see spots on your pictures. There is a huge risk of obsessive cleaning. ![]()
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