Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/10/12
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On 12 Oct 96 at 10:56, Nick Jackson wrote: > I wonder if anyone of you can unravel a small mystery for me. > > I just bought,via mail order ( a necessity from here), a polarising > filter for a 50mm summitar from a dealer in London. The filter arrived > in a beautiful little Leitz leather purse and showed great promise on > first sight. It has some signs of fungus growth around the very edge > which I presume is in the middle of the sandwich of glass, but what is > most bizarre is it doesn't appear to have any polarising effect! > > Now either I'm going blind or its simply lost its ability polarise - is > this possible? > > At certain angles to the light faint parallel lines are just visible, so > I'm fairly sure it is polarising glass and hasn't been swapped. I know > the shop and they are very reputable. I will send it back and wait for > another to appear, but would be grateful for any explanation of this > anomoly. > > Nick Jackson Polaroid material ages over time. I have never seen it myself, but a friend did. Heat and humidity apparently accellerate this process. Note that the environmentally sealed Kaesemann quality (sold by B+W and Heliopan) at least tackles the humidity problem. Not sure whether moisture is worse than heat, but I have seen warnings for both. Somewhere in the back of my mind I have the faint idea that pol materials use organic elements....it could explain this aging....not sure though. Maybe you should post this on the newsgroup sci.optics.... -- Bye, _/ _/ _/_/_/_/_/ _/_/_/_/_/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ illem _/ _/ an _/ _/ _/ arkerink _/_/_/ The desire to understand is sometimes far less intelligent than the inability to understand <w.j.markerink@a1.nl> [note: 'a-one' & 'en-el'!]