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I bought a lovely old 35mm Summicron from Red Dot Cameras in London - very friendly and helpful - and ordered a hood and UV filter separately. The hood fitted perfectly, but the filter was not the best of fits, so I dotted a couple of drops of superglue between the hood and filter. Perfect!

 

Except that two days later, when I went to use the lens, the front element had turned white. I Googled the problem, and found that superglue fumes wreck lens coatings.

 

Fortunately, we are covered for accidental damage, and our insurers will pay out, but it's a sad story.

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chrisgad, welcome to the forum!

What a disturbing event! I had not heard of this risk before.

 

Just wondering why you needed to cement the filter to the lens hood? Wouldn't that make removal of the hood impossible?

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chrisgad, welcome to the forum!

What a disturbing event! I had not heard of this risk before.

 

Just wondering why you needed to cement the filter to the lens hood? Wouldn't that make removal of the hood impossible?

 

No, the hood still came off the lens, and I thought I would not (often, at least) want to remove the filter from the hood. On the old Summicrons, you can't screw a filter in to the lens, so you have to use a hood to hold a filter.

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Is it the 12504 lens hood? Doesn't that unscrew to hold a Series VII filter inside the hood?

 

 

Thanks for the information on the glue! Good to know! Sorry you had to find out the hard way. :(

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Well known I thought, also affects paints and glass, not just coatings

Gerry

 

Cyanoacrylate is amazing stuff, but I see no applications for cameras that safer adhesives cannot perform.

 

One more thing to never get near a camera is powdered graphite ("dry lube"), such as found in small tubes to applied to locks, and so-forth. The particles are so small they invade anything nearby and can be carried deep into the works of a lens, for example, and ruin it.

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Is it the 12504 lens hood? Doesn't that unscrew to hold a Series VII filter inside the hood?

 

That's the hood for the pre-ASPH 35mm Summilux, allright. However, there is/was a Chinese clone of it (cheap) that was defective in that one of the tabs that held the unit to the lens did not extend fully, making the thing unstable, loose. Perhaps he has that one and the Super Glue just tacked the shade's base on. (If you get one of those Chinese clones, just identify the offending tab and use Dremel's thinnest cutting wheel to make its slot a tiny bit longer.)

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Fortunately, we are covered for accidental damage, and our insurers will pay out

 

Are you having the lens recoated or are the insurers paying to have it replaced? If the latter, seems like a sad end for such a fine lens. Is it an expensive process?

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Are you having the lens recoated or are the insurers paying to have it replaced? If the latter, seems like a sad end for such a fine lens. Is it an expensive process?

 

I am going to find out if the lens can be repaired, and if so whether the repair cost would be lower than the resale value of the lens. It would be the insurers' decision in the end, since they would be entitled to any gain.

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I would be most surprised if the marks cannot be removed, and I would be happy to use superglue on a lens if necessary. Having said in this case locktite or general purpose adhesive makes more sense to me. You get similar white marks with other superglue applications, esp. if the amount us is rather large. One or 2 very small drops would be enough in normal situations.

 

I think I used some superglue when glueing the lens mounting dot on my 28/2 asph (no problem, no white residue, after quickly removing any surplus).

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I would be most surprised if the marks cannot be removed, and I would be happy to use superglue on a lens if necessary. Having said in this case locktite or general purpose adhesive makes more sense to me. You get similar white marks with other superglue applications, esp. if the amount us is rather large. One or 2 very small drops would be enough in normal situations.

 

I CRINGE when I hear general remarks regarding Locktite. Look at all their products and you might find that their 'cylinder lock' might be more appropriate. Look, I've been using their stuff since it was invented. Be careful with all this stuff, but especially products other than Locktite which are aromatic and death to optics.

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I had a similar experience a few years ago with a Nikkor-O 2.1cm. I constructed a rear cap using an old film canister, glueing it to a modified Nikon rear cap and foolishly left it on the lens. On removal it was plain to see the problem, it had coated the rear element. I managed to remove the bloom with re-agent grade IPA without damage to the coating. Say's something about the durability of Nikon lens coatings.

 

Best,

 

normclarke.

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