p.giannakis
Pan Giannakis
My straight out of the box new (old stock) Nikkor 50 f1.4 does not pass the flash light test even it being new. The lenses are not sealed inside, dust and particles can go in. Sometimes more than that....
My straight out of the box new (old stock) Nikkor 50 f1.4 does not pass the flash light test even it being new. The lenses are not sealed inside, dust and particles can go in. Sometimes more than that....
Sure, a little dust can get in. But the lens you pictured, I would say, goes a bug too far! By the way, did you mean to say it was a Nikkor? It seems to be a Minolta.
I've never even heard of this 'test'. Who uses it and for what purpose? Cheers, OtL
This is the photography gearhead version of body dysmorphic disorder.
Perhaps, lens dysmorphic disorder; then again, this would also be applicable to other gear as well, but the lenses are the pieces most obsessed over in this way.
Phil Forrest
What is the best way to advertise and explain that the flashlight test is not always an accurate measure of how the lens will perform?
I don't want to sell the lens and then have the buyer ask for a return.
By comparison with most sellers, you're right, what the OP is doing seems excessive. However the people who have tried to sell me lenses with severe haze could have saved me and themselves a lot of trouble, had they done a flashlight test. Including pictures of it I also wouldn't recommend, it's hard to take them, and few would be able to interpret them.It's tricky, because you never know what kind of buyer you're going to get. I do think raking yourself over the coals in a listing with pictures of a "flashlight test" is poor salesmanship, and kind of self-defeating. It's quite common to see descriptions with "light dust, does not affect picture quality" or similar, and of course the actual degree varies wildly depending on the ethics of the seller. But if it were me, I'd probably state something like that and then include a lot of photos, and direct the potential buyer to judge image quality by those. If you stress-test the lens for flare, fog or similar by shooting into light and maybe showing some crops, I feel like that is an honest (and actually unusually thorough) way to demonstrate the condition of the lens. That seems more realistic due diligence than posting a photo of the optics in their worst possible representation i.e. a flashlight pic.
If it's a lens that typically sells for more than $1500 or so but shows a bit of haze, I find it worthwhile to spend the $125+- to have Youxin Ye CLA it. You'll get your money back and more for selling a clean lens.
I will buy lenses at a significant discount if there is haze that I have a good idea that a CLA will clean it right up.