Radost
Member
Hi, I worked there for the past 8 years, Also Cooke and Taylor Hobson previously, would love to have go at this just for the challenge.!!!
Sounds cool. Might be too expansive to ship to UK and back.
Hi, I worked there for the past 8 years, Also Cooke and Taylor Hobson previously, would love to have go at this just for the challenge.!!!
I'd use lighter fluid -- and a match.
This means the glass is pitted. Hopeless. Too bad.I can feel it with my finger.
This means the glass is pitted. Hopeless. Too bad.
Tried fluid and Aceton.
No difference.
Typically, an individual (if multi-layer) layer in AR coating is 1/4 of a wavelength; taking into account the index n>1, that amounts to 0.1 micrometer. Even multilayer, still well below 1 micrometer.How can you be so sure? Surely any coating that may be removable but that is on the lens means that you'd feel it with your finger but that doesn't mean the glass is necessarily pitted?
pentaxuser
I didn't read the comment as something in the anti-reflective coating, but rather something that is depositied on the lens surface. I know it isn't, but it looks like a layer of frost on the lens.Typically, an individual (if multi-layer) layer in AR coating is 1/4 of a wavelength; taking into account the index n>1, that amounts to 0.1 micrometer. Even multilayer, still well below 1 micrometer.
At this point, maybe you should soak the front element in acetone - for hours or a day. You can also try alcohol.
Maybe better:
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