Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2013/03/24
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]There must be a problem of stattic electricity, certainly with a new camera containig electronics. When I change lenses of an M, R or Hasselblad camera, and certainly with the M-9 I allways : 1? choose a quiet place and protect my camera as much as possible and never when it's windy, if possible go inside somewhere, a car or a building, be it a toilet, 2? allways turn the camera with the lens down, 3? have the new (clean) lens ready without its lenscap, clean my lenscaps, 4? have a blower at hand and if possible and/or have a table or somebody nearby for help and do the changes quickly after 2 or 3 strong blows inside with the blower without a brush! We all inspect the surfaces of our lenses closely and are used to see lots of dust and dirt on it in no time. The same phenomenon happens with our films, but the fine dust and particles are usually washed away during the developping process. Not so of course with digital cameras with interchangeable lenses. The dust and durt simply stays where it is and the problem grows steadily untill you do something. In my case this has worked without much fuzz for more than a year. When I first discovered the problem, I went to the local Leica agent who admitted the problem, cleaned the CCD in no time (about half an hour) installed the latest software with no charge for this first intervention. Kodak at some time developped sophysticated (often efficient but expensive) systhems for labs that had such problems. Sometimes they even advised to install metallic surfaces (usually stainless steel plates) that were grounded to the earth of the building. Good luck, Cedric 2013/3/24 Stasys Petravicius <stasys1 at cox.net>: > Hi All- I use panasonic p/s cameras on vacations. On the last trip I took > about 1800 happy snaps. I have discovered that there is a smudge in the > frame (depending on the light and composition). This is a $250 camera, and > sending it in for cleaning is not economical. I've done it before under > warranty- and it comes back if you shoot enough. Back on topic with Leica- > I just had my R9 serviced at the factory in Germany and guess what? The > spots are back in the images. I've had it back about 2 months. I can take > the DMR back off and clean? the sensor- but interchanging lenses - the > spots come back. I think the only solution is as suggested- a cleaning > system incorporated in the camera design - or a fixed zoom lens of say > 28- 200 mm range which you do not take off the camera body. Maybe I'll > just buy another panasonic $250 camera and use it for another 1800 or 2500 > frames. Best, Stasys > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information