Kino
Subscriber
Chances are you're going to pry that ring off and find out WHY it was glued there in the first place...
Using a proper filter wrench applies force circumferentialy and doesn't deform the shape of the filter. The problem with 'rubber sheet/bung' methods is that it is a polarizing filter so the front of the filter rotates freely.
The suggestion of freezing the lens & filter may have some merit. Try to remove the filter as soon as it is taken out of the freezer - or do it in the freezer if it is big enough. This assumes the aluminum of the filter has a greater coefficient of expansion, er contraction, than the plastic.
Just another question in this thread that is beginning to resemble the Painless Potter advice for the gunfight scene.
If it is crazy glue then isn't there something that can soften/melt it or is the cure in this case worse than the disease because the risk of damage to the lens?
Just a thought
pentaxuser
All good suggestions but one can also take it to a camera repair place.
freezing to shrink the filter, will make the tighter
Ah, that's what that stop is for.
????? The lens has external threads and the filter internal. You want to make the filter smaller so it pulls away from the lens threads. If you make the filter hotter it expands and gets tighter in the threads. All assuming the coefficient of expansion for aluminum is greater than that of plastic.
If one are paranoid about condensation slip caps on both ends. The air inside the lens isn't going to have any effect - there just isn't enough air that has enough moisture in it.
In any case this is a theortical argument for the sake of having an argument.
I agree with the 'leave it on the lens' solution. A drop or two of crazy glue to keep the ring from turning would be a help with using it all for a filter mount -- one that won't jam up.
OK thanksCrazy glue, like other "super" glues is removable with acetone and if you're camera lens barrel is plastic, it will damage it.
No, I said no to freeze the lens, filter as both will shrink, so use mild heat to EXPAND the filter ring only.
If I had access to a small block of dry ice, I would just chill the ring with that, but that's not the case![]()
They will only shrink or expand at the same rate if and only if all the parts are made of the same materials in the same way.
Mea Culpa.
My assumptions have, again, made an ass of me. Lesson - always look it up first.
Plastic has ~3 times the coefficient of expansion/contraction than aluminum.
So, to get the filter off you would heat the plastic and not the filter; well, you can heat both and it won't make much difference.
Heating the lens likely gets grease all over the diaphragm and other bits.
Heating just the aluminum will bind the filter as the filter threads will expand into the plastic.
The heating will be too low to melt that plastic and is only there to expand the ring well enough to break tension between the two.
Talk about any "melting" is a canard, there is no enough temperature and time to make it so.
Actually, aluminum is heat conductive, plastic is not. Also, aluminum has a contraction ratio much greater than plastic. The hope with such a technique is that the aluminum would shrink enough to actually break the glue bond allowing the ring to be removed.There is no benefit to freezing and shrinking the threads to be tighter, IMO, as heating for a few seconds, on low, is a much quicker and appropriate method.
Godspeed
Liquid nitrogen would work too!![]()
Also, aluminum has a contraction ratio much greater than plastic.
Actually, aluminum is heat conductive, plastic is not. Also, aluminum has a contraction ratio much greater than plastic. The hope with such a technique is that the aluminum would shrink enough to actually break the glue bond allowing the ring to be removed.
Such a technique wouldn't work with a metal lens housing as it also would be affected by the cold.
I strangely don't see myself walking into a dermatologist's office asking for a bit of their liquid nitrogen in a cup![]()
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