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I  had the camera in my Rolling bag and I had a rear lens cap on time.

The paint came right off when I took it out of the bag again.

 

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Oh dear

54 minutes ago, Photoworks said:

I  had the camera in my Rolling bag and I had a rear lens cap on time.

The paint came right off when I took it out of the bag again.

 

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Simply register for free here – We are always happy to welcome new members!

Oh dear

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If you use these search terms at Google:

does paint adhere to magnesium 

you get this AI overview:

Yes, paint can adhere to magnesium if the magnesium is cleaned, deoxidized, and primed before painting. 
 
Preparation 
 
  • Degrease: Use a strong alkaline cleaner to degrease magnesium.
  • Deoxidize: Use chromic acid to pickle the magnesium.
  • Prime: Apply a primer to the magnesium.
Coating options
  • Anodizing: An electrolytic process that creates a thick oxide layer on the magnesium's surface. This layer helps paint adhere and can also be dyed. 
     
  • Barrier coatings: A protective layer that prevents electrochemical activity and protects the magnesium from corrosive environments. 
     
  • Epoxy paint: An epoxy paint with a hardener can be tough and chip-resistant. 
     
  • Liquid polyurethane: A coating option for magnesium. 
     
  • Powder coatings: A coating option for magnesium. 
     
 
Application 
 
  • Use a system of etch, primer, and top coats designed to work together.
  • Avoid using different brand paints together.
  • Allow the paint to fully harden before using it.

 

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Other canikony cameras have extensive history of black on magnesium, and I've never seen that kind of black paint coating layer feeling off instead of just plain scratch.   perhaps Leica didn't do proper job on some batches of production?

 

edit:

I just looked at it again more carefully.  Perhaps it's not the coating that fell off, but rather rubbed/ground to some kind of hard surface?  If the camera rubbed against even plastic divider many times, perhaps.

Edited by jpark114
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No doubt it's had long and determined rubbing.

If any  distances to travel, I put my precious things in polypropylene (sandwich) bags, inside camera cases/bags... that definitely eliminates all scratching or rubbing. I learned early on when I got some rub marks on my new M-P bright chrome, after a short flight.

Bad luck, a tough lesson.

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