Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/11/25
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 04:55 PM 25/11/98 -0800, you wrote: >But now I guess I need to add to the question. How do you remove fish guts >from your camera. The ooze should leak under the shutter speed dial, under >the f/stop ring, under the focus ring. And once there, you can't get it >out! You'll have to send it to a repair person, who will savagely clean >your equipment. Dilemma! What to protect? A cleanable lens element, or >un-cleanable camera workings. The fact is that pro users (journalism, commercial, industrial) work in crappy situations (with Ted...LITERALLY!). Things have to be protected, cleaned and/or repaired often. A couple of weeks ago I spent 8 days at an oil refinery. I shot over 200 rolls of film. The cameras and glass had to be cleaned 3 or 4 time a day. This is the reality of using cameras professionally. This is also why, as I mentioned in another thread, why professionals usually budget a few thousand dollars per year for equipment repair and replacement. The Cleaning Kit? WARNING: Don't read this if you are squeamish about such things. Windex, alcohol, lint free cotton cloths, toothpicks, Q-Tips, Leatherman Tool, portable compressed air with vacuum attachment. If I didn't clean my lenses, I would not be able to see out of them by the end of the day. Greg Locke <locke@straylight.ca> St. John's, Newfoundland. <http://www.straylight.ca/locke/> - ---------------------------------- "I've finally figured out what's wrong with photography. It's a one-eyed man looking through a little 'ole. Now, how much reality can there be in that?" -- David Hockney