What could this be on the inner side of the front most element on my telephoto lens?

Digger...

Been spending a lot of time on here!
Joined
Mar 13, 2024
Messages
1,218
Reaction score
1,817
Location
Australia Victoria
Can others edit my Photos
Photos NOT OK to edit
I dont know what this is or if its affecting my shots, any ideas? Could it be some dislodged seal or something? Is it fungus?

Would it be a good call to get this serviced, what would you do?
IMG_20240920_104951.jpg
 
Last edited:
This would just be a basic service clean job? Pretty sure its just on the front most element. Any advice would be appreciated??

Is to far away from the sensor to have any affect?
 
Last edited:
Gonna take the train to the city in the morning and get it serviced, had a look on google and it's definitely the start of some fungus growing.

$150 to $200 bugger!

Ps. Edit, 19 views and no input. Hmm.
 
Last edited:
Feel let down here that no one tried to help with my lens issue, thx all.
 
Just noticed this thread now. If it's fungus, then it got wet and/or you have high humidity where your gear is stored. Better deal with that issue because all your gear could get fungus, including the newly-cleaned lens.
 
Just way this, Digger. Looks like fungus. If it's the front element, you could the element yourself and clean, if you are adventurous.
 
Another vote for the fungal diagnosis. New or old lens? Recent purchase? Check whether local repair talent is up to the necessary teardown and clean-up.
 
Fungus spores are tiny and are everywhere. They are distributed in the air. You can assume that everything is infected by fungus. But they are just tiny spores. The trick is preventing the spores from growing. That way they stay microscopic and cause no trouble.

Keeping fungus from growing is as simple as keeping the humidity low. I don't know the exact humidity threshold, but have heard 70% relative humidity mentioned. Stay below that. Fungus also needs time to grow, and I have heard it needs a couple of days. Fungus also loves the dark.

So don't store your gear at higher than approx 70% RH for longer than a couple days in the dark.

Most places where I live and travel have lower humidity than that, because they are heated in the winter and air conditioned in the summer. There are exceptions, of course. There was a risk in the Amazon where it was very humid and no AC. The lodge provided a cabinet with a light in it, intended to create some warmth. That reduces the RH. I managed there for 5 days without any other measures and it was OK.

One time in the winter I put my camera bag away after a shoot, not realizing there was snow clinging to the bottom. A week later I went to get the camera, and everything inside the bag was covered in fungus filaments. :( :( The snow had melted and soaked the bag. My 28mm lens was pretty bad and needed repair. The other gear was only affected on the outside.

Fungus needs nutrients to grow. The filaments have evolved the nasty property of etching glass surfaces to get the minerals it needs. So even if you remove all the fungus, a glass surface might still be etched.

So you definitely don't want to store your gear in conditions where fungus thrives. Pay attention to the humidity and don't let your stuff sit around long if it is wet.
 

Most reactions

Back
Top