Re: UV/Haze filter

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I am sort of in the middle of you....I have the UV filter constantly on..Else it may not be there when I need it...(paied the price with some "lost" frames)

and the hood has saved my lbig zoom ens being drop from I meter on the street....but I do not take chances with mis-behaviour...

baggies on the tripod feet? come on! new rubber taps are available at the dollar store!

Anyway, time to ask something too....is it true that a hood enhaces the image contrast? (maybe do not letting it degrade by the side light?)

enjoy, kostas

--- Στις Δευτ., 09/11/09, ο/η David Dyer-Bennet <dd-b@xxxxxxxx> έγραψε:

Από: David Dyer-Bennet <dd-b@xxxxxxxx>
Θέμα: Re: UV/Haze filter
Προς: "List for Photo/Imaging Educators - Professionals - Students" <photoforum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Ημερομηνία: Δευτέρα, 9 Νοέμβριος 2009, 1:04

Gregory wrote:
> I'm the exact opposite. I never carry a UV on any lenses, just extra glass my sharpness is required to pass through. I keep my lenses hoods on at all times instead. I have yet to lose a lenses from blowing out the glass. I have also never lost any threads from using metal hoods, dented but functional is my norm. I have lost plenty of those plastic hoods.


I've done both at various times with various lenses (though, looking back, I see a pattern that my more expensive lenses are the ones I DON'T put a filter on).  Haven't lost a lens or hood or even the threads to a fall in any case.


>
> My friends are amazed at how badly I treat my equipment. Anyone out there put plastic baggies on the feet of your tripod before use? I have a friend who does.

Not a baggy guy in that context, no.


I seem to handle my cameras somewhat gently, given how long they last and how few dents they have, but I don't feel it interferes with my getting pictures.


Hmmm; what are the craziest things people have done with their cameras?  Only the first one of mine impresses even ME very much; I'm not a huge risk-taker.


I set my D700 on its back on the ground, pointed up at the muzzle of a mortar less than two feet away, knowing that in addition to the gunpowder and the projectile there were two baggies of gasoline in the barrel to "enhance" the muzzle blast; I had to clean a thin layer of gasoline off the front of the lens after that one.  The picture was spectacular.


I've lowered cameras off a bridge by the tripod, to take shots from close to water level.  As I remember it, the pictures weren't in the end very interesting.

--
David Dyer-Bennet, dd-b@xxxxxxxx; http://dd-b.net/
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