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Can I Use Alcohol To Clean My Camera Lens

Regular rubbing alcohol effects on photographic camera lens.

I have used 70% rubbing alcohol to clean my Nikkor 35mm F1.8G AF-South lens before. Here are my questions.

i) Does using this alcohol easily strip away the lens coating? Even with light pressure?

2) How practise I know if I stripped away any blanket at all?

3) Some say using alcohol is a practiced way to clean a lens, while others say it is bad. What is the truth, if whatever?

beshannon • Veteran Member • Posts: 4,216

Re: Regular rubbing alcohol effects on photographic camera lens.

1

Sigma DP2s Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZS7 Leica V-Lux (Typ 114) Nikon D800E Nikon ane J4 +3 more than

hotdog321

hotdog321 • Forum Pro • Posts: 21,077

Re: Regular rubbing alcohol furnishings on camera lens.

1

The instructions for my $135 Nikon CP multicoated filter really states to use alcohol or lens cleaning liquid. I would only use a lite mist, notwithstanding.

Catechism EOS 5D Marking IV Catechism EF sixteen-35mm F4L IS USM Canon EF 24-70mm F2.8L II USM Catechism EF 70-200mm F2.8L IS Ii USM Canon EF 11-24mm F4L +3 more

Re: Regular rubbing alcohol effects on photographic camera lens.

Trueth is to take plenty of alcohol before cleaning your lens...

pixelless • Contributing Member • Posts: 612

Re: Regular rubbing alcohol effects on camera lens.

WashingtonState wrote:

Trueth is to have plenty of booze before cleaning your lens...

But if you lot exercise it right, by the time you become to the cleaning of the lens, there will be no more than booze. Problem solved!

Re: Regular rubbing alcohol effects on camera lens.

1

hotdog321

hotdog321 • Forum Pro • Posts: 21,077

Re: Regular rubbing alcohol effects on photographic camera lens.

Good analysis--thanks!

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV Canon EF 16-35mm F4L IS USM Catechism EF 24-70mm F2.8L II USM Canon EF 70-200mm F2.8L IS II USM Canon EF 11-24mm F4L +3 more

Teila Day

Teila Day • Veteran Member • Posts: five,564

Booze on canonical lenses isn't a worry

Timeless Kingdom Media wrote:

I accept used 70% rubbing alcohol to clean my Nikkor 35mm F1.8G AF-S lens earlier. Here are my questions.

1) Does using this alcohol easily strip abroad the lens coating? Fifty-fifty with light pressure level?

No.

2) How exercise I know if I stripped abroad any blanket at all?

You'd probably encounter information technology

iii) Some say using booze is a good way to clean a lens, while others say it is bad. What is the truth, if whatsoever?

The truth is that manufacturers recommend alcohol to clean specific lenses.

You rarely need to use any cleaning solution at all for your lenses period. Exhale on the darn thing and wipe it clean with a microfiber cloth and exist on your merry way. Cleaning fluids are pretty much a rip off.

Yes, alcohol is acceptable on a lot of lenses. The Nikon mentions using booze to clean the $1700 17-35 f/2.8 lens. You should simply take to practise so on rare occasion. Y'all lens shouldn't be getting that dirty (unless yous're routinely shooting in a swamp while up to your cervix in muck and mud or something of the sort).

I would imagine that after a period of time, if you constantly make clean your lens with alc., that coatings will habiliment- but they'd do that anyway but by constantly rubbing the lens if you're cleaning your lens that much... but you'd have to rub with the pressure of an idiot to have that happen... which I'm confident you lot wouldn't exercise.

Try this:

Blow grit off your lens, then gently button the dust off with a soft clean cloth. Then breath on the lens fogging it up. With a microfiber fabric, clean your lens, using your breath as the cleaning solution... "polish" the lens clean. End of story. You're done.

Should take you less than 90 seconds initially and less than 30 seconds after you've done information technology a few times.

next time you lot clean your lens, use the best cleaning solution you can detect, and follow the directions.

At present.... compare the ii cleanings and see if you tin come across a deviation. I'll spare y'all the trouble- y'all can't.

I never liked 70% alc. though. I usually use 90% or higher for cleaning camera stuff. All but the rarest of times, I use my breath. By the time something grows on my 17-35 considering of information technology, I'd have by that time gone through several replacement lenses anyhow.

Don't sweat it. Just don't use alc. when you don't take to. Exhale on it, clean information technology, then get back to shooting with it. That's the bottom line on that.
--
Teila M. Day

Gearóid Ó Laoi, Garry Lee

I adult this simple technique more than than 30 years ago.

I'ts never damaged any lens.

This is what I do.

Put a piddling, maybe a couple of cups of warm water in a bowl. Cascade a few drops of shampoo or liquid detergent into information technology and classy it to make suds.

Get a little cotton wool and dip it in information technology. Squeeze the liquid out of it and then clean the lens with the clammy cotton fiber wool.

Side by side. Breathe on the lens and make clean it with fresh dry cotton wool wool.

Bingo. Make clean every bit a pin.

As I've said I've washed this for many years (occasionally, for finger prints etc) and I've never seen any damage.

Fujifilm X10 Canon PowerShot S90 Panasonic FZ1000 Canon EOS-1D X Sony Alpha NEX-vii +30 more than

AnandaSim • Forum Pro • Posts: 13,422

Re: Regular rubbing booze effects on camera lens.

Timeless Kingdom Media wrote:

I have used 70% rubbing alcohol to clean my Nikkor 35mm F1.8G AF-S lens before. Hither are my questions.

1) Does using this booze easily strip away the lens blanket? Even with lite pressure?

2) How do I know if I stripped away whatsoever blanket at all?

3) Some say using alcohol is a good way to make clean a lens, while others say it is bad. What is the truth, if any?

I don't know whether alcohol strips lens coating away.

I am hesitant nearly the term "rubbing alcohol":

Wikipedia:
---

Rubbing alcohol is a cellular, volatile, and flammable liquid. Information technology is transparent, though it tin can be coloured as desired. It has an extremely biting taste from its additives and (in the absenteeism of added odorous substances) a characteristic odor. The specific gravity of Formula 23-H is betwixt 0.8691 and 0.8771 at 15.56°.

Isopropyl rubbing alcohol USP/B.P. contains 68–99% of isopropanol (isopropyl alcohol) past book, the remainder consisting of water, with or without color additives, suitable stabilizers, and perfume oils.
--------

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubbing_alcohol

Here is an article I put upwards for discussion and contribution:
http://www.dpreview.com/articles/0804148643/cleaning-your-lens

In my view, in that location is no need to overclean your lens and there is a progression of "softly softly" measures. I have not got my lenses so grimy that I need alcohol.

Kodak EasyShare P880 Olympus PEN E-PM2 Panasonic Lumix DMC-G2 Olympus E-620 Olympus E-510 +fifteen more than

Teila Day

Teila Day • Veteran Member • Posts: five,564

Re: I developed this simple technique more than than 30 years ago.

Any works!

What I came to realize many years ago was that commercial cleaning supplies to clean the sensor AND lenses are basically a waste of money, and make clean no amend than stuff people already have at home.

Industry preys on a photographer's fear that the glass on a lens, or the drinking glass over the camera's sensor is this super sensitive piece of equipment, and it'south not.
--
Teila K. Day

Joe186

Joe186 • Senior Member • Posts: 2,098

Re: Regular rubbing alcohol effects on camera lens.

The best communication I ever got was ~

"Employ a make clean, loftier quality microfiber lens fabric and a bit of breath"

...never had a problem doing just that.

I do, however, go on all my lens cloths in a dissever bag and when I accept a bunch of used ones built upwardly, I just toss them in a gentle, warm wash cycle, with a tiny fleck of normal detergent.

As long equally I'one thousand ordering stuff like that, I ususally get a bunch... 50 to 100 is basically a lifetime supply.

http://www.simplygoodstuff.com/microfiber_lens-cloths.htm

http://world wide web.brandeditems.com/framepages.php?id=109

Re: Regular rubbing alcohol effects on camera lens.

You can use alcohol (methanol, ethanol, isopropanol) to clean your lenses and filters, but I would recommend yous observe a better source than "rubbing alcohol".

Rubbing booze is either ethanol or isopropanol with up to about xxx% h2o. So far so good. The problem is that there are additives in rubbing alcohol such equally perfumes and/or denaturants so that you can't potable the ethanol variety. These can leave residues on your glass.

Yous need to find a source of laboratory class alcohol.

-- hide signature --

Dick Thomas
Kalamazoo, MI

Re: Regular rubbing alcohol effects on camera lens.

Fifty-fifty if this is viii years sometime, I'll have to say my opinion on this and then that other people who are new tin can run into. I have a Catechism camera and I use pure alcohol to clean the lens, but I exercise not apply alcohol right away, I exit the cloth (or whatever you use) a few minutes to dry a bit then that booze drops don't actually become in and perhaps damage the lens or the camera

Gandolphi • Senior Member • Posts: 2,405

Re: Regular rubbing alcohol effects on camera lens.

I have used toothpaste before now and the blanket seems okay.

Timeless Kingdom Media wrote:

I have used 70% rubbing alcohol to clean my Nikkor 35mm F1.8G AF-S lens before. Here are my questions.

1) Does using this booze hands strip away the lens blanket? Even with light pressure?

2) How do I know if I stripped abroad any coating at all?

three) Some say using alcohol is a good way to clean a lens, while others say it is bad. What is the truth, if whatever?

Leica SL (Typ 601) Leica SL2-Southward Leica APO-Summicron-SL 35mm F2 ASPH Leica Super-Vario-Elmar-SL 16-35mm F3.v-four.5 ASPH Leica Summilux-M 50mm f/ane.4 ASPH +2 more

dincz • Regular Member • Posts: 439

Re: Regular rubbing alcohol effects on camera lens.

v

Gandolphi wrote:

I have used toothpaste before now and the coating seems okay.

Using an abrasive substance on a lens doesn't seem similar a not bad idea.

jp4 • Senior Member • Posts: i,199

Re: Regular rubbing booze effects on camera lens.

Timeless Kingdom Media wrote:

I have used 70% rubbing booze to clean my Nikkor 35mm F1.8G AF-South lens earlier. Here are my questions.

1) Does using this booze easily strip away the lens coating? Even with light force per unit area?

2) How do I know if I stripped away any coating at all?

3) Some say using booze is a good way to clean a lens, while others say information technology is bad. What is the truth, if any?

I've used 91% alcohol for stubborn spots for years with great results, never a problem.

Canon PowerShot G5 X Canon EOS 80D Canon EF-S 18-135mm F3.5-5.6 IS USM Catechism EF 100-400mm F4.5-five.6L IS Ii Tokina AT-X Pro xi-16mm f/2.8 DX II

Bob

Bob • Veteran Fellow member • Posts: 3,720

Re: Regular rubbing alcohol effects on photographic camera lens.

My magic formula is 30% alcohol and 70% distilled water.   It must exist distilled water, not tap water.

bofo777 • Senior Member • Posts: 2,152

Re: Regular rubbing alcohol furnishings on camera lens.

Denatured Alcohol is what I use on my Oct Scanner optics to removed smudges and this would apply as on camera lenses.. All rubbing alcohol does is move the smudge around..

Olympus Eastward-ane Olympus E-M1 Olympus E-M1 II Olympus E-M1 Three Fujifilm GFX 100S +15 more

Re: Regular rubbing alcohol furnishings on camera lens.

1

1 - I would never practise that

two - 70% alcohol means it's 30% h2o

Sony a6400 Sigma 30mm F2.8 EX DN Sony Due east eighteen-135mm F3.five-5.6 OSS 7artisans 25mm F1.8 Sigma 56mm F1.4 DC DN | C (X-mount) +1 more

Source: https://www.dpreview.com/forums/thread/3099241

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