Alcohol prep pads

WayneF

Senior Member
Grit is an issue when rubbing on lenses. :) In the old days, we were always advised 1) to blow the lens off first with a blower, to minimize the grit. At least lightly brush it first. And 2) to always crumple any pad or cloth first, to leave crevices to trap the grit, to keep from grinding it into the lens (and the fancy lens coatings). And to rub only lightly. A lens is not at all like window glass or mirror glass.
 

rocketman122

Senior Member
be aware there are coatings on the element and there is only a certain amount of times you can wipe it till it starts to deteriorate. I saw it happen to one of my lenses years ago. I would wipe it every wedding and after 3 years you can see it looking like it had a light limescale effect although without the white it comes with. be careful. get a filter on it.
 

480sparky

Senior Member
Zeisswipes.jpg
 

Radioactive

Senior Member
Hello,I use the Zeiss wipes. They have alcohol in them. I contacted Zeiss to see if the alcohol would have any effect on the coatings of Nikon lens's and they said no. I first wipe the lens from the center then working my way to the outside of the lens. Then I let the wipe dry a little and redo. I am very happy with the results.Bill
 

STM

Senior Member
I would not use alcohol prep pads. The are designed for disinfection and not cleaning coated glass. Zeiss wipes work well because they are designed for coated eyeglasses. They leave behind minimal streaks.

There is a better alternative in my experience. Get yourself a piece of photo chamois. Your breath is free and you always have plentiful supply. Breathe on the glass an GENTLY wipe it with the chamois. If there is visible dirt, brush it away first.
 

Deleted

Senior Member
After a severe blowing with the rocket blower, I use a lens pen. If I felt it needed more, I would use Eclipse fluid on a Pec-pad.
 
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