JohnTF
Veteran
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- Joined
- Jul 11, 2008
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This questions is of interest to me too.
After a rain shoot with my DSLRs, I take each item (lens, body) seperately in a zip lock bag and load it with silica gel.
Do the rain shooters here do the same or is it just the towel and open storing over night?
Is silica gel harmful to any of the Leicas incredients (the shutter curtain for example?)
I am told the normal treatment for a watch that is wet is for the repairman to open it, and let it air dry at normal temperatures, never using heat. Often, or so I am told, that is about all it needs, if the water is not corrosive.
Should work with mechanical cameras, but if I get water inside of a camera, or watch, I would want to have it checked out.
Assuming you do not travel with a repairman, I would think a good air drying would be best, at normal temperatures, and the removal of any batteries.
I would not generally shoot in heavy rain, unless I saw some image of great interest, though I used to shoot some football games and some of us got to feel the power in a Graflex Strobe battery.
I had one experience with a few drops of salt water in a new AF SLR, and it was an immediate and lethal experience for the camera. I had just paid a guy $300 to run us over to an Island for some shots with a model, fortunately, spare cameras saved the day.
I have seen silica gel actually draw enough water to get soggy, which would indicate the local humidity is perhaps 100%, don't think I want my camera sealed with that?
I hear from Igor that he had some Blad lenses that cleaned up perfectly, except the diaphragm blades were destroyed by rust, so he sold them for parts. I had a drowned Rolex that ran for two years after drying, until I had it rebuilt by Rolex in Paris. Watch looked new.
Regards, John