Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/08/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I use it on my photographic lenses and am a strong advocate of the product. It's a bit pricey for eyeglasses, however. Even us 'carriage trade' type Leica owners might find it a bit ostentacious to pull out the ROR bottle to clean our specs. Gather round, and I'll disclose a little known product that is aces for cleaning all manner of window glass AND safely cleaning those delicate plastic eyeglass lenses. The neat thing is that Windex looks like a hack product next to it. It is the most streak resistant window cleaner going, bar none. Momma will love it, if she does windows! It's a product that you make! Get a clean 1 qt/liter spritzer bottle and fill it halfway with low mineral water. Doesn't have to be distilled; reverse osmosis stuff works fine. If your tap water fits the bill, use it. Fill the remaining half of the bottle with 70% isopropanol (drug store/chemist's rubbing alcohol). Add 1 or 2 drops of dishwashing detergent, shake and use! (If you're really pickey, get a non-ionic surfactant, but all the common liquid diswashing products that I've tried work fine) Use it liberally and wipe dry with lint free cloths. Well washed linen napkins work particularly well. Here in the U.S desert southwest, many of us add various tinted plastic film to the inside of our windows to help reduce the radiant heat and the high glare from the always present sun. Some (most) of these film products are fairly easily scratched and the manufacturers recommend not using ammoniated cleaners. The film will fog over time with ammoniated cleaners. I still use ROR for my lenses, where I'm not sure of the effect of isopropanol on the adhesives and coatings, but on all else the above formula works like a champ! BTW, most facial tissues that are not impregnated with softeners, are safe for your plastic eyeglasses also. See, we're getting right back to Ted's undershorts again! - -- Roger mailto:roger@beamon.org Thought for the day: When in doubt... manipulate the data.