thuggins
Member
I was cleaning the Voigtar lens on an old Bessa, which had significant haze on the rear of the middle element and the front of the rear element. This is fairly typical and is certainly associated with the proximity of these surfaces to the shutter mechanism. Given the appearance of water borne mineral deposits, they are most likely caused by condensation that leeches contaminants out of the shutter and onto the lens. These deposits cannot be removed with a typical cleaning, so normally I leave them and hope for the best.
On the Voigtar these were heavy enough to significantly impact the image. The first roll shot thru it it has a soft, "retro" look. It wasn't objectionable; in fact, it was kind of a nice look. But it wasn't what the designer had intended or what the lens was capable of.
Long story short... I had some Lime-A-Way, which is made to remove hard water scale. I put a little on a cotton swab and gave the lens a gentle cleaning. Holy crap, Batman!! I have never gotten a lens this clean before. Literally crystal clear! The next roll of film showed an amazing difference.
Granted, the Voigtar is uncoated and this cleaning would most likely remove any coating on the lens. But these sorts of deposits would destroy the coating anyway. Given the preference between an unusable, coated lens and a pristine, uncoated one, I'll take the latter any day.
On the Voigtar these were heavy enough to significantly impact the image. The first roll shot thru it it has a soft, "retro" look. It wasn't objectionable; in fact, it was kind of a nice look. But it wasn't what the designer had intended or what the lens was capable of.
Long story short... I had some Lime-A-Way, which is made to remove hard water scale. I put a little on a cotton swab and gave the lens a gentle cleaning. Holy crap, Batman!! I have never gotten a lens this clean before. Literally crystal clear! The next roll of film showed an amazing difference.
Granted, the Voigtar is uncoated and this cleaning would most likely remove any coating on the lens. But these sorts of deposits would destroy the coating anyway. Given the preference between an unusable, coated lens and a pristine, uncoated one, I'll take the latter any day.