How expensive is it to fix a Nikon auto focus lens with fungus?
OK here is the bottom line, would any of you buy a Nikon 35-70 f2.8 AF zoom, for less than a hundred dollars, hoping repair would not make is not a deal?---"The glass has haze on the internal elements. This may have a softening affect on image quality."
Bobby
PS--I checked KEH, and I guess I am stuck (I do NOT absolutely need this lens) between taking a gamble or waiting if I do need one, to simply go to a store and get one that is fine with a warranty.
If you don't need the lens, remember the most common bit of advice in Monty Python & The Holy Grail. Run away! Run away!
Haze isn't fungus. Fungus isn't haze.
Haze isn't fungus. Fungus isn't haze.
"This may have a softening effect on image quality" means that you can count on the lens to pass light and form an image and that's all.
Run away! Run away!
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Dan,
You speak with some authority about the haze not being fungus.
What would be your thinking as to what is causing the haze?
Not to tread on Dan's toes, but as I understand it, almost all zoom lenses change focal length by moving a central lens group back and forth. This means that the volume of the internal air spaces within the lens change and in turn means that a lens has to have some small breather holes (otherwise you couldn't work the zoom). This opens the way for air to enter the lens. If this air is humid, haze may form. If it is dirty (tobacco smoke, etc.), the haze may be more persistent and will not disappear when the lens is warmed up. Mold spores are I believe frequently present in the air, if they enter the lens through the breather holes and are then left in warm humid conditions, mold growth will result.
I try to combat mold by not buying second-hand lenses with any visible speckles inside, by storing lenses in cases or plastic bags with silica gel sachets, and by drying gear carefully if it has been out in damp conditions. Many times I ahve driven home from a landscape shoot with the car heater up full and the camera bag open on the passenger seat. In poor conditions I usually carry a towel and wrap the camera in the towel immediately if any water drops fall onto it.
Regards,
David
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