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- From: vporguen@unlinfo.unl.edu (victor porguen)
- Newsgroups: rec.photo
- Subject: Re: Fungus on lens
- Date: 25 Dec 1992 04:37:13 GMT
- Organization: University of Nebraska--Lincoln
- Lines: 49
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1he35pINNii5@crcnis1.unl.edu>
- References: <b4u503EKc3Bd00@amdahl.uts.amdahl.com> <2300088@hpgrla.gr.hp.com> <1992Dec22.095521.17861@ncrcae.ColumbiaSC.NCR.COM> <1992Dec24.014716.6155@bony1.bony.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: unlinfo.unl.edu
- Keywords: fungus
-
- jake@bony1.bony.com (Jake Livni) writes:
-
- >In article <1992Dec22.095521.17861@ncrcae.ColumbiaSC.NCR.COM> appy@churchill.ColumbiaSC.NCR.COM (Pratul.Sharma) writes:
-
- >>do it myself. Also how do I avoid fungus killing other lenses.
-
- >Fungus grows in damp air. Store your lenses and equipment in dryness.
- >Wrap them in plastic wraps or seal them in airtight containers. Add a
- >dessicant like Silica Gel to keep the air inside dry. I keep my stuff
- >in Rubbermaid containers with packs of dessicant that I re-dry every
- >year.
-
- That's generally good advice. However, in the long run, even mild
- humidity is enough to allow fungus to grow on polished glass surfaces.
- The main problem is that the fungus does corrode the surface, and
- "cleaning" as such is not really possible. You have to re-polish the
- surface to eliminate all traces of the growth, because the fungus
- etches the glass surface as it grows on it.
-
- As Livni says, keeping the lenses dry is the best defense - but even
- that is not really necessary. The important thing is to have a low
- RELATIVE HUMIDITY in the environment. Thus, if you are in a tropical
- environment, storing the camera lenses in a cabinet with a low-wattage
- electric bulb glowing underneath or within is often a good defense.
- It raises the temperature enough to lower the relative humidity, even
- if no water is actually removed from the air.
-
- >Fungus also has the nasty habit of moving around, all by itself.
- >Therefore, if you have fungus on some equipment, you may be
- >endangering other clean equipment by storing them together.
-
- Fungus doesn't "move about" - it's all around us, in the air, in the
- form of spores. It's all over the world, more in some areas than in
- others, but it doesn't have to "move" or "jump" from lens to lens...
- <grin>.
-
- >If you're serious about your stuff, get it all cleaned (even if it
- >costs money) and then keep it clean. You may decide that it's not
- >worth the money; that's your decision.
-
- I wish him luck. If the growth is not too deep, a cleaning might
- eliminate much of the markings, but not all. Some marks will remain
- on the glass surfaces unless they are re-polished - which is usually
- not practical.
-
- Quite a few years ago, Eastman Kodam made a study of fungus growth on
- lenses in tropical environments. Don't know how to get the data,
- though... any Kodakers reading this?
-
-