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Just noticed these internal changes, close to the rear lens of my early Elmar 5cm (139761, 1932)

The structures appear to be crystalline in nature (under close examination - difficult to reproduce image via pic) & not filamentous (ie fungal hyphae) - these were not present the last time I looked closely (ie last year or so).

Even though the lens resides in Brisbane, Australia (hot/humid climate) it is always kept in a sealed container with a regularly replaced moisture absorber 

What are we dealing with here - it doesn't appear fungal (crystalline & non-biological imho) - what about lens separation or lens glue related. It doesn't appear to be affecting image quality.

Any input would be greatly appreciated

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2 hours ago, romualdo said:

cheers - that was my likely diagnosis

It would have been better if it was fungus, but I think fungus would be dots or tendrils while separation forms distinct patterns.

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Lens separation of that vintage lens is certainly fixable (separate the Balsam cemented elements, clean and reglue in correct alignment - DAG can do it), but is specialized and usually expensive.

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On 3/4/2025 at 3:48 AM, TomB_tx said:

Lens separation of that vintage lens is certainly fixable (separate the Balsam cemented elements, clean and reglue in correct alignment - DAG can do it), but is specialized and usually expensive.

I did contact Don & he confirmed it was lens separation - still tossing up as to which way to go at this stage

"Yes, that's separation but not bad, cost to re-cement the inner lens element group is $185.00 plus shipping, not too sure if its economically feasible".

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sometimes DYI works (if you have skills and tools to dismantle the lens). Rear part consists of lens 3 that is screwed in and cemented 4+5, they are fixed mounted in brass mount. Unscrewing 3 and putting 4+5 (with the mount) into oven at 110C helps sometimes that canada balsam becomes liquid again and fill in completly space between 2 cemented lenses.

But as mentioned, does not always work

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