Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/01/24
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]The radical solution is to leave the front lens cap at home in the lens box! I protect my lenses with Leica or B+W UV-filters (and lens hoods attached). In this way they are ready to use when I pick them up from my photo bag, and they go back there as fast too. The best back lens caps are those that take two lenses back to back. (Comes with the Leica photo bags, but can be ordered as accessory. You may also glue two ordinary back caps back to back). This allows fast switching of lenses. As Jim and others have taught us, I will unscrew the filters for very critical work. On these occasions I have time for that, as I usually will use a tripod as well for that ultimate image quality. I saw three photographers from one of the large Swedish newspapers the other day. I was astonished to see them handle their expensive long tele lenses for their Nikon F5:s. They used no rear lens caps at all, not even any caps for their camera bodies. Just down with everything in the photo bag. I guess they vacuum clean their bags every day, but I would never go that far, having to pay for my gear myself. /Hans >I have a new type 50 summicron ie with built in hood. The problem is that >the snap-in 39mm lens cap falls off as soon as you look at it. I have also >got lenses with snap-in 46 and 60mm lens caps and these are fine.The larger >sizes have metal springs which push out the two tangs; on the 39mm the push >is provided by deforming a plastic ring, which being plastic behaves >plastically not elastically! Anyone else bugged by this problem or got a >solution? > Thanks in advance >Mike Boreham >