KevinL
Flashlight Enthusiast
Hmm..... I hear so much about canned air being used as a duster, together with all its associated ills.
The photography folk have been using the Rocket Blower for many years, to clean sensors, which are especially sensitive to residue being left. I can personally testify, having cleaned everything from a Canon 350D, 20D, 30D, 5D Mk1 sensor with these things, that there is no residue left. My later-generation cameras have their own integral dust removal systems and I haven't needed to tamper with them, but when I need to get dust out of a lens, the rocket blower is the first thing I turn to.
http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/search...tialSearch=yes
It works great for anywhere you'd need a puff of compressed air. No propellants to worry about, no contamination, works great on reflectors and flashlight lenses - that's what I use to clean my glass, both camera and lights. When I'm modding and I need to clean out the interior of a new light.. that's what I use too.
Forget the canned air. You can do so much better
The photography folk have been using the Rocket Blower for many years, to clean sensors, which are especially sensitive to residue being left. I can personally testify, having cleaned everything from a Canon 350D, 20D, 30D, 5D Mk1 sensor with these things, that there is no residue left. My later-generation cameras have their own integral dust removal systems and I haven't needed to tamper with them, but when I need to get dust out of a lens, the rocket blower is the first thing I turn to.
http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/search...tialSearch=yes
It works great for anywhere you'd need a puff of compressed air. No propellants to worry about, no contamination, works great on reflectors and flashlight lenses - that's what I use to clean my glass, both camera and lights. When I'm modding and I need to clean out the interior of a new light.. that's what I use too.
Forget the canned air. You can do so much better