Theo Sulphate
Member
For those that know, what keeps lubricants stay where they're supposed to stay? In particular, I wonder about aperture blade lubrication.
To preface my concern, I have many cameras on shelving so that they are in the "normal" orientation. Also, I have lenses attached to each. For lenses that are not mounted on cameras, I usually store them objective side down with a rear lens cap covering the rear element. Long lenses I place laying flat, so they won't topple over if bumped.
It seems that regardless of orientation among many lenses, I have had only *one* lens where the lubricants ran onto the blade: it was a bought-new-in-1988 Nikkor 50/1.4 that's spent 99.9% of its life mounted on its equally new F3/T. From 1988 to mid 2016 it was fine, then one day oil everywhere. It was never exposed to temperatures over 80F while not in use and maybe 90F for a few hours decades ago. The lens has since been repaired. The repairman, who I know personally, said there was a brief time Nikon used a different lubricant and my lens may have had that. But, anyway, the lens orientations I've been using haven't seem to have resulted in problems.
To preface my concern, I have many cameras on shelving so that they are in the "normal" orientation. Also, I have lenses attached to each. For lenses that are not mounted on cameras, I usually store them objective side down with a rear lens cap covering the rear element. Long lenses I place laying flat, so they won't topple over if bumped.
It seems that regardless of orientation among many lenses, I have had only *one* lens where the lubricants ran onto the blade: it was a bought-new-in-1988 Nikkor 50/1.4 that's spent 99.9% of its life mounted on its equally new F3/T. From 1988 to mid 2016 it was fine, then one day oil everywhere. It was never exposed to temperatures over 80F while not in use and maybe 90F for a few hours decades ago. The lens has since been repaired. The repairman, who I know personally, said there was a brief time Nikon used a different lubricant and my lens may have had that. But, anyway, the lens orientations I've been using haven't seem to have resulted in problems.