One_DaveT
Member
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2008
- Messages
- 30
- Format
- 35mm
Tonight I just learned about the use of thorium in lenses up until 1980's. This prompted me to go dig out my 60's vintage civilian defense geiger counter, which I bought years ago after some goof ball medical technician made a wise crack about the half life of the liter of barium I had just quaffed for a cat scan. (fwiw, the drinkable stuff is from a non-radioactive isotope).
Anway, I put my old lenses to the test. I can say after scanning for alpha and beta particle that I believe the following lenses are Thorium-free:
Nikkor-N 24/2.8 pre-AI
Nikor-S.C 50/1.4 pre-AI
Nikkor-P 105/2.5 pre-AI
Nikkor-Q C 200/4 pre-AI
FWIW, I checked a few other lenses:
Zuiko OM 50/1.4
Minolta Rokkor 200/3.5
Minolta Rokkor 50/1.7
After reading that Thorium in lenses goes back to 1937, I checked my Exakta lenses: Steinheil 135/3.5, Westenar 50/2.5..... nope.
In hindsite, after reading wikipedia, it doesn't seem like much of an issue anyway. It says alpha particles from thorium can't even penetrate human skin, so even if I did have a thorium lens, it likely wouldn't be a concern unless I breathed the pulverized dust of a broken lens. Given that the use of it in commercial lenses stopped around 1980 makes me wonder if three-mile island incident in 1979, might have made marketing thorium lenses impossible, and lead to the end of it's use.
Interesting diversion for the evening though.
Anway, I put my old lenses to the test. I can say after scanning for alpha and beta particle that I believe the following lenses are Thorium-free:
Nikkor-N 24/2.8 pre-AI
Nikor-S.C 50/1.4 pre-AI
Nikkor-P 105/2.5 pre-AI
Nikkor-Q C 200/4 pre-AI
FWIW, I checked a few other lenses:
Zuiko OM 50/1.4
Minolta Rokkor 200/3.5
Minolta Rokkor 50/1.7
After reading that Thorium in lenses goes back to 1937, I checked my Exakta lenses: Steinheil 135/3.5, Westenar 50/2.5..... nope.
In hindsite, after reading wikipedia, it doesn't seem like much of an issue anyway. It says alpha particles from thorium can't even penetrate human skin, so even if I did have a thorium lens, it likely wouldn't be a concern unless I breathed the pulverized dust of a broken lens. Given that the use of it in commercial lenses stopped around 1980 makes me wonder if three-mile island incident in 1979, might have made marketing thorium lenses impossible, and lead to the end of it's use.
Interesting diversion for the evening though.