Sensor spots?

sonicbuffalo_RIP

Senior Member
I'm too paranoid to damage my sensor because I don't know much about how to clean it. I usually drop it off at the local camera store, and they charge $50 for DX, $85 for FX I think. It seems fairly reasonable.

Jak....have you watched the video? Save yourself some cash! It's easy....most of the time it just needs a rocket blower to blow the dust off...just don't use canned or compressed air as it leaves a residue. Come on, if you've gotten this far, you can do it yourself.
 

JackStalk

Senior Member
I've seen a few tutorials, I'll have to look into it. I am just worried about breaking a $3000 piece of equipment that I know little about mechanically.
 

sonicbuffalo_RIP

Senior Member
I've seen a few tutorials, I'll have to look into it. I am just worried about breaking a $3000 piece of equipment that I know little about mechanically.

Well, first of all, you need not worry too much. You see, the sensor in your case is covered with a OLPF or in other words, a piece of glass that goes over the sensor, an anti aliasing filter. You won't be touching the filter itself, and will only be cleaning the filter, which is where the dust bunnies gather. I recommend you watch this video and try it yourself. Of course, I'm not responsible if you do something wrong, but thousands of people are cleaning their sensor/filters every day. You can do it and save yourself a bundle. Here's the video:

The Wet Method of Cleaning a Digital SLR Sensor - YouTube
 

Felisek

Senior Member
Use what suits you but every cleaning method has it's drawbacks and the one person claiming it ruined the sensor was a Sony camera user and reviewers have stated repeatedly not to use these with the Sony cameras. We use gel sticks in the photography department at the college where I work, and have for years, without issue.

Did you (or photo department) use it on a sensor without low-pass filter? I just received the gel stick and the instruction manual talks about "cleaning the low-pass filter". I wonder if it is safe to use it directly on the sensor.
 

yauman

Senior Member
My guess is that two drops of a liquid (my own sweat?) landed on the sensor when I was changing the lens. Anyone else seen something similar?

I guess it is sensor cleaning time. Can you recommend good and safe cleaning kit? What about Eclipse?

I doubt it's your sweat. Even with the lens removed, the sensor is not exposed - it's behind the mirror and the shutter. So unless you set the camera to Mirror Up and the Shutter to B and press the shutter, you will have a hard time trying to drop your sweat on the sensor.

Usually dust bunnies or specs (light and dry stuff) gets on the mirror or most commonly on the back of the lens (that's why rear cap is important.) and when the lens is back on and you take pictures with it, the mirror flaps up and down and stir up air current inside the mirror chamber. The air current dislodge the dust and eventually they land on the sensor. So, as you can see, it really takes some effort to get dust specs on the sensor.

Full disclosure: I work in a full service camera store (yes there's still a few left!) and we charge $60 for sensor cleaning. We also sell the gel type cleaning kit for $30 but most people opt to leave it for us to clean.
 

yauman

Senior Member
Did you (or photo department) use it on a sensor without low-pass filter? I just received the gel stick and the instruction manual talks about "cleaning the low-pass filter". I wonder if it is safe to use it directly on the sensor.

The LPF for optical anti-aliasing is a very thin - very very thin piece of glass (just minutely frosted or made of lithium niobate glass) installed over the sensor and then there is another piece very smooth optically "perfect" piece of glass over that - so you are never ever touching the sensor when you clean - you are cleaning that piece of glass. On cameras with no LPF, there is just a piece of plain glass over the sensor - so you are cleaning that piece of glass.

Because of the sandwich, one of the defects (which we have seen in older Canon Cameras) is a fungus growth can appear between the glass and the sensor - shows up as spiderly specs. Try as you might, it cannot be cleaned because it's between the sensor and the protective glass. (I have a Canon 10D with that problem - will see if I can take a picture to show you.)

So, clean away all you DIY'er and don't stress over it - you won't damage the sensor!
 
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