How to Clean your Camera Sensor & Lens-NO MORE DUST SPOTS!!
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- čas přidán 8. 11. 2020
- Tony Northrup shows you how to clean your sensor, mirrorless camera, DSLR & lens. This video is sponsored by VGSO (which we were using for most of a decade before they sponsored us). Here's a list of the VSGO products used in this video:
* Imp Blower: SDP.io/VSGOimp
* Larger Blower: SDP.io/VSGOblower
* Falcon Outdoor Blower: SDP.io/VSGOfalcon
* Travel Cleaning Pack: SDP.io/VSGOtravel
* Power Switch: SDP.io/VSGOpower
* Cloth: SDP.io/VSGOcloth
* Camera Sensor Cleaning Swabs: SDP.io/VSGOsensor - Věda a technologie
And don't forget to clean the inside of the lens cap. Caps usually just get taken off when I shoot and stuffed in a pocket.... mega source of cruft and cludge..
I usually get more crudd and schmutz than cruft and cludge from my lens caps.
@@falcoperegrinus82 Your trouser pockets are clearly cleaner than mine...
I normally get miff and lint on mine
Very usefully remark 👍
Thank you, I never thought about the cap being the problem!
For mirrorless cameras with in-body stabilization (like the Sony); remember to place in Cleaning mode from the menu. This locks the sensor in place; otherwise it is floating around when trying to swab the sensor.
Good point Jeff, For mirrorless cameras with IBIS, after placing in Cleaning mode, leave camera switched on to lock sensor while cleaning. Suprised this wasn't mentioned by Tony.
Unless you have a Nikon mirrorless. It will lock the IBIS in place when you flick the power off. And please don‘t listen to people who advise you to take the battery out of your camera before cleaning because of electrostatics. That‘s BS.
This should of been emphasised in the video. Swab an unlocked IBIS sensor and it will likely get messed up. They are very sensitive.
@@malcolmtruby7211 to be able or what ever e4
@aussie8114 heck. Went through quite a lot of info before cleaning my A7 in and this was not mentioned. I did go through the pdf and nothing like this was mentioned for cleaning. I've done it now anyway. 🤷 Will just have to see how it goes.
*ATTENTION! THIS IS NOT HOW A LENS AND CAMERA SHOULD BE CLEANED!*
Tony, that is not the prism, that is the focusing screen! *DO NOT EVER CLEAN WITH ANY CLOTH OR TISSUES THE FOCUSING SCREEN! IT WILL RUIN IT INSTANTLY!* It has a fine nanostructure on the exposed surface! Tampering with it will result in much dimmer viewfinder and visible scratches. The focusing screen can be removed and washed with alcohol or distilled water. The focusing screen must be held by their edges with tweezers or medical gloves to avoid grease contamination. Also a very-very soft brush is ok, but it has to be extremely clean (you should wash your brush too every few months). Also don't blow the back of a lens! You will shoot dust inside of the lens assemblies and that you will be not able to remove it ever, only if you send it to a service. Dust in the lens reduces contrast by a lot especially when shooting against a lightsource!
Agreed....Tony, can you make that change in your video? It's really needed.
@@bt10ant he should take down the video and redo it properly. He should ask a few lens and camera repair guys for proper instructions. I'm shocked how irresponsible and ignorant he is.
Ehi, I know I'm like 3 months later, but are you referring to the part on 10:36? I am going to my first cleaning today
@@alessandroguagnelli7216 yes, exactly. Don't do that. If you don't see spots in the viewfinder, don't clean the focusing screen.
Maybe I'm lucky but doing all of this as never impacted my equipment. At least five different dslrs over the years, a dozen lenses, outdoor photography.
Excellent description. The products you showed look really nice. A blower with an air filter is a must if you ever want to use it on a sensor. I would add two inexpensive items: a plastic cap for the lens back and one for the camera lens mount. They lock together for storage. If you have them out and unlocked when you clean, you can drastically cut the time that inner parts of cameras and lenses are exposed to dusty air. If you are doing this while sitting at a table, you don't even have to lock the caps on to get a lot of dust protection.
be me "oh wow Tony has the same blower as me!" Tony "This one is GARBAGE *throws it across the room*" =(
YUP!
We all have that same crappy blower! 😁
In a sponsored video, I'd call that a sales technique
A blower is a blower. It blows air.
The normal Rocket blower is perfectly ok. Though as the rubber degrades it should be replaced because internal rubber particles can be released into the air stream. That applies to all blowers. How often to replace depends on rubber quality, temperature changes and use.
I always use the blower on the brush before using the brush on my camera.
You should wash the brush every once in a while to get rid of the greasy stuff.
I júst bought a lenspen with brush. Used it once for 3 seconds on my kitlens, switched to my other lens and it just spread so much dust over the second one. I'll just stick to a squeezy pump thingy when possible.
@@OttosTheName I always use the blower on the lens first. Then, if there is any stubborn particles still left on the lens I will use a brush to get those off. But I always use the blow off the brush with the blower first to make sure there is nothing in the brush that could cet on the lens and possible scratch it.
just got that same black VSGO filtered blower yesterday and what a difference it makes over cheap blowers. Just the feel and power, plus not adding dust or particles. Was hesitant to spend that kinda money on a air blower but glad I did. Single easiest step takes no time to keeping a mostly dust free sensor.
Thanks Tony. I have been frightened of touching my gear for 40 Years!! Even when I know camera repair people touch sensors every day of the week. Will try VSGO TODAY! Sponsorship rewarded!
Thanks Tony. I really appreciate this video. I have always been afraid to clean my gear and it shows. You have emboldened me to give it a try. And I don't mind if you're sponsored. You are up front with it and I get that. Besides, I have to pick a product at some point anyway and having something that you have used is helpful to me.
Sensor cleaning (mirrorless) 12:11 - 12:32.
Thanks! I just ordered the VGSO Sensor cleaner, blower and pen! Thank you for all of your teachings.
You're a salesman's dream.
Very helpful! Thanks so much, Tony. 💛🙏🏽
I love the thorough, conversational style that Tony consistently provides with every topic. Another fantastic tutorial, Tony. Cheers from Australia. 🙌🏾
Wow! Thanks! I’ll be ordering these VSGO products ASAP through the links provided!
I have a tek vac at work (I make electronics). Not a cheap vac, but ss one source of sensor dust is what gets into the mount, and only later gets onto the sensor, a vacuum for clean rooms and such is superb. Gets out the dust that is drifting around inside your bodies and lenses.
Wow, I've never seen dust bits that big on a sensor in my life, and I swap lens in the field occasionally. Lens cleaning swab kit is a must-have.
he put it there to show lol
@@Paldentseringsherpa Yeah, you're probably right.
With seeing this promo VSGO product was recommended by my camera shop. Good to see a tutorial by a photographer . Thanks.
Great video Tony! I had a hard time finding any reviews or tutorials on how to clean your lenses or sensors. I was surprised, since there are so many photography review channels on CZcams.
Thanks for this video! Im learning a lot from your channel :D My Canon has had dust on the sensor for a while and I was worried that the dust was somewhere I couldnt reach at first, like inside the lens or something. But its perfect after cleaning the sensor!
Great update Tony! Thanks 😃
Great informational video. Thanks.
great stuff Tony, thanks!!!
Thanks for the video. I have a cheapo dust blower like the one you tossed and it continues to serve my cameras and lenses well.
Best to replace every few years as the internal rubber can break down releasing rubber particles into the air stream,
@@aussie8114 thanks for the tip
Thankyou Tony, this was a very helpful episode, I bought the kit on Amazon!!! My regards to your family!
Tony, is your Sony turned on or off when you perform the wet cleaning with the swipe? There is some recommendation in the internet to first apply the automatic cleaning cycle via the Menu and then to keep the camera powered on to hold the sensor in place.
Very clever, and using the current technology...thank you Tony
been using vgso for years...well worth the price.
Thank you this was super helpful as I’m having trouble with lens or sensor dust. I took so many cool photos but they are ruined do to dust spots.
Good comprehensive video. Thanks
Thank you for demystifying what would otherwise be an expensive trip to the camera store.
thank you. I cleaned the initial two but was sure there was a way to move the mirror and get that last one. first video didn't show me but you did and thats exactly where the piece of dust was
You got me hooked! I have great content. Really sophisticated way of delivering the knowledge! You're golden
Interesting products. I have a basic blower and now I might change for a VGSO.
Thanks for putting up the vid. Are those sensor swabs a 1 time use?
so glad this video came out
Very cool. Will definitely try
products are fairly priced which is nice to see, thanks for the recommendations tony!
besides the blower the rest just looks like rebrand of the standard chinese stuff you can get off amazon
@@Glenners you do know that those "standard Chinese stuff you can get off amazon" ARE ACTUALLY VSGO products, don't you? VSGO is a Chinese brand, designed in China, made in China, imported from China.
Great video Tony
I too have been using vsgo products for years. And sending the camera in for cleaning? LOL!!! I’d have to send it in weekly. These products are must haves for Sony mirrorless especially!
I found this very useful.....Thank you
Very useful and important topic thank you
Super helpful, thank you.
very nice tutorial
Tony Gracias por este video muy importante!
Is that a dead pixel at 2:05, starts on the sensor of the camera and goes above the sensor (or mirror) and then to the mount ring.
Great video. I love making technical videos like this for my channel
That was so helpful! Thank you
Great update video, Thank you! BTW, and I'm only saying as a point of review, I can hear the focusing motor on the lens that you're using to record this video on.
Excellent information. As a bonus, the tossing of empty containers over the shoulder was hysterical, and your staircase is gorgeous.
No problem. Chelsea will pick them up - NOT!😱
No, these are bad advices, you will ruin your lens and your dslr viewfinder.
When you blow clean the mirror box of a DSLR you also should turn the camera upside down and blow out the AF compartment which is located at the base of the mirror box. Excessive dust in the AF compartment can cause auto focus issues.
Great Video! I was wondering for the sensor cleaning do you wipe on the same size of the brush over the sensor both ways?
HAHA! How funny. I just got my cleaning set through your old link just last week!
Excellent vid thank you.
No, these are bad advices, you will ruin your lens and your dslr viewfinder.
Thanks Tony 😊
I've read that BSI sensors like A7iii are manufactured differently where some more delicate components are more exposed.. Does it have any impact on the way we should clean the sensors? As for example the swabs and liquids?
Very useful video👍
I used a sensor swab on my sony a7iii and i got multiple streaks across my sensor, had to take it to professional sensor polishing to fix it.
How much did this cost? Same result on my Sony alpha 6300... Don't do this to your sensor people.
great video!
I like that case where did you get it?
A good one Tony !
My work requires high apertures, about 250k images a year! I've tried nearly all the sensor cleaning products. VSGO has proved to be the absolute best.
How often do you clean your sensor?
@@chakyeungpang5920 Really only every 6 months or so…depending on what shows up. 5D Mk4 is pretty good about sensor auto clean.
@@gbaren I got the a73 it’s only been a week and I needed a wet clean, is that normal? 😅
@@chakyeungpang5920 I'm a Canon user since the 70's so I don't have Sony still camera experience. I've "heard" some Sonys are dust magnets, which rules them out for me as I shoot high quantity, high aperture content.
Tony which leather case is that?
What did you do, leave these cameras open in the garage while you were cutting wood on the table saw?
Is there a way to clean out the dust and sensor on the X100 series? I seem to have dust collected on the lens, but can’t get it off. I don’t know if it would be ok to take it apart and see if I could clean it. Maybe have a video on cleaning fixed lens cameras.
Is that a good way to pop eye cup off like this?? Worry about it a moment 😆 (it can be took off gently by pinching and holding the left and right side of the eyecup with two fingers, right?)
Hello Tony. I got the D500. I have noticed that the dirt is not visible all the time but is visible when I shoot a macro / video. So where should I clean up? Thanks
I've always been told that when I put the lens down make sure I get the back covered preferably with a lens cap so gravity doesn't add any dust to it while it's sitting there especially if I was blowing dust around,cleaning the camera
Since I own a 5Dsr, one thing Roger from Lensrentals said stuck with me. He said they found that when they used blowers to clean the 5Dsr sensor, it sometimes lodged dust under the filter glass that reverses the anti-aliasing. So only on 5Dsr and not on 5Ds. It’s on one of his posts if you are interested but he didn’t go into detail. So maybe would be best to minimize blowing on th 5Dsr sensor, and if you do it, probably best to get one of those blowers with filters. Doesn’t sound like cleaning under the sDsr filter would be easy. Maybe not even do-able. Just something I remember that might be important or helpful.
THANK YOU!!!
Thank you !!!!!!
can I use compressed air? the ones used to clean/blow PC dusts?
Tony: "It comes with a whole bunch of swabs, that should last you a little while." Me: "Well, I have an a7III and a7RIII so that'll last a couple weeks."
What’s wrong with a7III
@@chakyeungpang5920 just very prone to dust spots.
@@LoriGraceAz Any mirrorless camera really. The sensor is always super exposed. Had it professionally cleaned one time, the next day I had already a huge dust spot on it.
@@motttta The Canon R5 has the mechanical shutter than closes when you change the lens so dirt doesn't get on the sensor. The new Sony a1 also has this feature so thankfully they're finally addressing that issue.
Ok I’m sold. I have the dodgiest cleaning kit that came free with some piece of gear from eBay. Do they sell a bundle with everything to cover each step of the process?
What's the best way to clean OLPFs in cinema cameras?
On sony's for sure and probably other brands first do internal cleaning mode. Then don't turn camera off since it locks the ibis so you can do a wet-clean its states so on the screen manual and yes i checked with sony. Second video where you clean it with ibis wobbeling around. Will it hurt it probably not but its easier that way and how they designed it,
10:44 squeeze the sides of the cover where the ribs are. There are locking levers inside that hold it on.
Hi,,,can I do it from bottom to top, flip the swab and back again top to bottom?? Because I try to clean mold in the bottom which i cannot get it using swab amd cleaner for left to right because the pressure might be more in the middle
Is that okay to expose the camera sensor to direct light like tony did using the smartphone flash? Does it damage the sensor?
Great recommendations.... I didn't know there was higher end blowers!
Yep. They have two advantages. First, the nozzle is made of softer plastic to lessen the damage if you accidentally touch the sensor or DSLR mirror with it. Second, the filter keeps you from flinging sharp dust and sand grains at about a hundred miles per hour.
If digital ISO is signal gain only, then why not shoot at base ISO and then exposure as one wishes in software afterwards? Or is there more to it than that?
Love that leather case
The best ones are those Swiss made ones for repairing watches. I have being using one for over 15 years and the rubber is still as if new.
Try squeezing the sides of the eyepiece instead of forcing it off! ;)
I sent my first DSLR for cleaning and there were still dust spots on the sensor, so I learned how to DIY, that's pretty scary the first time, but OK after that.
I've not heard of VSGO here, their kit looks really good quality.
Although some time has passed, I am still very moved to see this video content again! The sharing process is really great!! thank you😘
2:25 That is not the prism. That's the focusing screen you're looking at.
And he is just ruining it by rubbing with a wet tissue.
Focus sensor is in the base plate under the mirror, there is a second mirror behind the main semi transparent mirror sending the image downward in the opposite direction to the viewfinder.
@@TheOtherPhotoGuy, I know where the focus sensor is. The part that Tony is calling the prism is still called the "focusing screen". It's the screen that the lens is projecting the image onto (same distance as the film/sensor just flipped 90 ° up), so the user can do see the image and do manual focusing etc. The prism sits above the focusing screen and turns the image upside up.
Yes you are extremely knowledgeable nice one
Always the best commercials.
I realize that this is a sponsored video and appreciate that they are showing off new products. I had believed that you should only use Aeroclipse on Sony Sensors. Is this new cleaning solution as safe and effective as Aeroclipse and Sensor Swabs?
Just ordered VSG Blower & got up the nerve to clean my mirrorless full frame sensor. Thank you!
The fancy packaging must add to the price.
Can the sensor cleaning swap be reusable?
Hi Tony - It has been suggested to me by a couple of professional photographers that you should not try to clean sensors that have IBIS due to the risk of damage or misalignment. Do you have any thoughts on this?
All cameras with IBIS a have mode to lock the IBIS. On Sony cameras the IBIS will lock after you activate the internal sensor cleaning mode he showed in the video. After the wobble is over you‘ll see a message on the screen and the IBIS is locked until you press ok. On Nikon mirrorless the IBIS will lock up when you switch the camera off.
amazing video, my prism had tons of dust on it and I couldn't figure out where all the dust was.
Talking of autofocus, on pentaxes there are small semi-transparent mirrors under the main mirror that often need cleaning as on my K5s and K3. After cleaning my autofocus inconsistencies go away..
I like this channel and Im really impressed by how knowledgable Tony is, but some of this information is not the best.
Most cameras have a lowpass filter protecting the sensor so no issues there, but the eye piece part of the finder is easily scratched if you use your finger to wipe. The way he did it was alright, but dont wipe before using a brush.
Also, the part he called "prism" is actually the focusing screen. Touching that thing with anything instantly scratch or smudge it.
Also worth noting that keeping the mount, mirror and area around the sensor clean helps to keep the sensor clean, and tiny metal particles might scratch your sensor if youre not careful.
after you dab the sensor. do you have to let it dry for a minute?
Can that sensor cleaning kit work with the Canon R5?
I'm curious about cleaning the Translucent mirror on my A77. Bought the camera used, using the blower didn't remove all the dust off the mirror so I had to resort to using a very fine tipped swab. This made me very nervous due to the mirror being extremely delicate. BTW I also have what looks like a couple of water spots on it. Is there any advice you can give me on the A77 mirror? Is there a fluid I can use along with the swab to remove the spots?
That‘s a bit of a delicate topic. Those translucent mirrors are very sensitive and cleaning them can be a bit of a pain in the bottom. If I remember correctly there is a special cleaning tool for them
@@romanpul thanks.. I'll keep looking around to find the cleaning solution.. Worse case scenario, I may have to buy a new mirror. I know they're not overly expensive. Truth be told - I bought the body for $300 CND with 8000 sutter actuations, even if i have to spend a few bucks for minor things, im still ahead of the game.
Does the cleaning fluid ever streak on you?
Tony hasn't forgotten how to clean CD/DVD's, cleans the lens using the same technique.
Would a Compressed Air Spray, like those used for cleaning IT equipment be too high pressure for cleaning a DSLR?
Yes, absolutely. They also make things very cold, which could damage equipment.