Hi all,
Is the Giottos Rocket Air Blaster good for cleaning lenses/film/filters? Is there a better solution that's safe to use?
Hi all,
Is the Giottos Rocket Air Blaster good for cleaning lenses/film/filters? Is there a better solution that's safe to use?
I can't speak for he air blaster, but I have used lens pens for a few years now with total satisfaction. Brush the dust away with the very gentle slide out bristles and then use the soft pad at the other end to clean any finger prints, etc. I have three in different kit bags. Cost is around $11.00 per.
"One of the greatest necessities in America is to discover creative solitude." Carl Sandburg
I have the Giotto Rocket Air Blaster. I don't use it. Calling it a "rocket blaster" is a triumph of marketing hype. I've seen many little hand-held air blowers that put out as much air and do as much as the Rocket Air Blaster, which isn't much.
To remove light dust particles I just breathe hard on lenses, filters,etc. after making sure no spittle comes out. My breath costs nothing and is with me at all times. I've seen a theory propounded to the effect that there's something in your breath that's supposed to be harmful to lenses or lens coatings or something like that but since I've never seen any problems from doing what I've been doing for many years I just continue with it.
Brian Ellis
Before you criticize someone, walk a mile in their shoes. That way when you do criticize them you'll be
a mile away and you'll have their shoes.
Cheapest, safest and best is to use activated charcoal on a Q-ti in circles from center out. The lens will sparkle. NO liquids to worry about and a much cleaner lens.
Activated charcoal is obtained as a digestion additive from health food stores. Open one or two of the capsules into a 35 mm film canister, or similar. Dip Q-tip in and knock off all excess then lightly clean lens in circles. You will be amazed at how much the lens will sparkle.
For years I carried a $3 Radio Shack desoldering bulb as a blower. Worked great. But now I use a couple of the Giottos Rocket Blowers. They're bulkier, but easily found in camera stores and are actually rather handy. One reason is that there's a valve on the back so multiple "puffs" are easy, without sucking back in the same dusty air you just blew away. Another is the long plastic tip gets inside bellows, recessed rear lens elements of teles and inside deep lens hoods. Third is that the rocket fins actually serve a purpose-- to keep it standing upright and the tip out of the dirt or from scratching negs on a light table (Makes it a fun conversation starter, too.)
The Rocket works very well for cameras, as it can reach the parts which are "around the corner", but otherwise is just a blower. For lenses or filters it works just as well as the cheapest one you could get, i.e. some fluid is still needed for stuck dirt.
I always found it better to blow dust away with a blower, then use a brush to remove more stubborn particles, and only after this to use lens cleaning fluid and paper.
The Giotto Rocket is an OK blower, performs its job quite well. It is not to be confused with similar named Giotto Rocket espresso machine...
The main things it to never drag hard particles across the glass. Reusing a cleaning material is a very bad idea, since eventually it'll pick something up than can scratch the lens. As a result, keep your lens clean by using a soft and clean brush or blowing the specs of dust off of it, and only use liquid cleaner if you really, really have to. If you need to wet clean, get some lens cleaning paper. (Never rub it dry against the glass!) Roll it up in a tube. Now tear it in half. That is your brush. Place a drop of lens cleaning fluid on the torn edge, and lightly move it across the glass, turning to expose a new part of the brush. After one swipe, use the other half the paper. Make new 'brushes' as needed.
“You often feel tired, not because you've done too much, but because you've done too little of what sparks a light in you.”
― Alexander Den Heijer, Nothing You Don't Already Know
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