If you've never disassembled a lens before, send the Leitz lens to a professional and practice on simpler lenses. Leitz lenses are often complex, with very close tolerances and need specific tools used with skill and experience to prevent damage.Hello.
I am planning to perform some internal cleaning to remove fungus (about a few dozen of small fungus spots) and haze on the Leica Summicron 50mm f2 collapsible lens made in late 50s. I have got some rubber vacuum things of different sizes and a spanner tool for lenses, set of small screwdrivers. I also have some lens cleaning pads and liquid, which tends to do a great job at cleaning the lenses from rain drops, finger prints and other nastiness.
What else would I need to do the task and are there any guides or lens diagrams that you can share with me to help me in this task.
I have never cleaned or disassembled the lens before. I have a few inexpensive lenses that I can try on before doing the Leica lens. Like an industar and Zeiss lenses which I bought for under 15 quid from eBay. Any suggestions or help is appreciated very much!
Several years ago someone sent my a Summicron Collapsible to repair- someone has inserted THREE of the groups in backwards. Common mistake that people make, not orienting the elements correctly when putting back together. I quickly learned to make a mark with a Sharpie marker when disassembling lenses to mark the Outside surface for proper orientation. I learned after doing a CLA on a cheap Zoom lens. Whoops. Learned a lesson, and spent another hour taking the zoom apart again.
It's not worth messing with yourself if you don't have a clean space to do it in. I've taken apart several lenses, and at first, I didn't respect the dust in the air. I'd clean them, reassemble them, only to find that they're even more dusty than before. No matter how well you clean them, dust will re-accumulate before you can get them reassembled. Now, I do this work in a bathroom with tile floors and run an air filter in there for a few days before. I also thoroughly clean the room and turn off the heater or A/C and close the vents to prevent air circulation. It's a huge mess. And even then, I still always manage to get some dust in between the elements. However, if I'm careful, I can do a pretty good job at getting them cleaner than how they started. I also use gloves and try to keep my skin and hair covered up with clothes that aren't soft and frizzy (like a nice, pressed dress shirt). It's a lot of work, which is one of the reasons why I don't care too much about tiny dust particles in a lens anymore. Because even if a lens looks clean when you first assemble it, you can find out later that there was dust on the sides of the barrel which later migrates to the lens.David, yes indeed. I was thinking how to minimise the dust that is present in the air. My room is fairly dusty and has carpets ((( I could put things in a box while working on other parts, but still, not guaranteed. Perhaps they sell electrical gadgets like ionisers that attract dust and thus making it less likely that the dust will end up inside my lens. Alternative is to build a glass box with wholes for the arms, but unfortunately, I've not got much space in my house to keep those things.
How would the soap help? would it make glass more slippery and thus I can easily blow the dust off before putting the elements in their places?
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