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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D7100
D7100 sensor dust
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<blockquote data-quote="voxmagna" data-source="post: 613460" data-attributes="member: 38477"><p>I've still had a permanent problem since I bought my Nikon D750 and I'm wondering if other Nikon cameras have the same issue? I never changed the lens for 3 months and kept seeing 'dust'. Then I discovered it wasn't dust, but fibers coming off the mirror box lining, plus anything else the sensor attracted. I am displeased with Nikon for introducing a material inside the camera that in my case isn't stable. Before convincing yourself you have a dust problem to which most DSLR owners will say 'That's normal', have a close look inside your Nikon camera mirror box and see if it has an anti reflective lining like my D750. When you do the f22 shoot the sky test, have a close look at the spots. If they look at all like curly like fiber strands it isn't dust! Don't accept that anything on your sensor is dust which came in from outside. If you are DIY cleaning the sensor be aware that not only can fibers detach from their black lining but it can also grab fibers from tissue and micro fiber cleaning cloth.</p><p></p><p>A traditional SLR camera design fed film across the gate from the roll and wiped it clean before each shot. The DSLR replace the film with a fixed high resolution sensor which is going to capture every single spec of anything falling on it. If anything inside the camera body detaches itself (which includes lubrication oil) you have a big problem. I was curious about Nikons bundled software which post corrects spots on the image, but I now think it's there to cover over the issue of internal contamination caused by the choice of materials used in the construction of the body. I prefer to try and clean up shots manually with PS because batch correction of spots can be a disaster if some shots have image detail and not plain sky.</p><p></p><p><a href="https://nikonites.com/d750/37784-d750-unable-clean-dust-off-sensor-3.html?highlight=dust+sensor" target="_blank">https://nikonites.com/d750/37784-d750-unable-clean-dust-off-sensor-3.html?highlight=dust+sensor</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="voxmagna, post: 613460, member: 38477"] I've still had a permanent problem since I bought my Nikon D750 and I'm wondering if other Nikon cameras have the same issue? I never changed the lens for 3 months and kept seeing 'dust'. Then I discovered it wasn't dust, but fibers coming off the mirror box lining, plus anything else the sensor attracted. I am displeased with Nikon for introducing a material inside the camera that in my case isn't stable. Before convincing yourself you have a dust problem to which most DSLR owners will say 'That's normal', have a close look inside your Nikon camera mirror box and see if it has an anti reflective lining like my D750. When you do the f22 shoot the sky test, have a close look at the spots. If they look at all like curly like fiber strands it isn't dust! Don't accept that anything on your sensor is dust which came in from outside. If you are DIY cleaning the sensor be aware that not only can fibers detach from their black lining but it can also grab fibers from tissue and micro fiber cleaning cloth. A traditional SLR camera design fed film across the gate from the roll and wiped it clean before each shot. The DSLR replace the film with a fixed high resolution sensor which is going to capture every single spec of anything falling on it. If anything inside the camera body detaches itself (which includes lubrication oil) you have a big problem. I was curious about Nikons bundled software which post corrects spots on the image, but I now think it's there to cover over the issue of internal contamination caused by the choice of materials used in the construction of the body. I prefer to try and clean up shots manually with PS because batch correction of spots can be a disaster if some shots have image detail and not plain sky. [URL]https://nikonites.com/d750/37784-d750-unable-clean-dust-off-sensor-3.html?highlight=dust+sensor[/URL] [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D7100
D7100 sensor dust
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