MarkBarbieri
Semi-retired
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2006
- Messages
- 6,172
The scourge of the DSLR.
1) How often (if at all) do you clean your DSLR sensor?
2) How do check to see if it is dirty?
3) How do you clean it?
4) Has getting a DSLR with the anti-dust shivering helped?
I'll start with my answers.
1) Only when necessary. It may be once a day. It may be once in a few months. I do it when I notice that it is dirty.
2) Sometimes I notice in shots that I've taken and that prompts me. Other times I check before I got on a big shoot. I check by setting the aperture to the smallest setting (highest f-stop) and either shooting through my Expodisc (it's like an extreme diffusion filter) or by shooting something with no detail (clear sky or solid cloud, a non-textured wall, or a campaign speech). Depending on my mood, I either look at the image on my computer or I look at it on the LCD on the DSLR. If I use the LCD, I magnify it as much as possible than then scroll across the entire image in stripes. I'm just looking to see if there is more dust than I find acceptable. It's just about never pristine.
3) I clean with a little battery powered blower. Following that, I either use a sensor cleaning brush or a Dust-Aid (a little sticky thing like a post-it note on a stick). If that still doesn't cut it, I use a pec-pad on a stick and wipe it.
4) My sensor only shakes when I'm hand-holding the camera, so I have no answer for this one.
The affect of aperture on sensor dust is interesting. When I first started shooting with DSLRs, this baffled me. Here's my attempt at explaining it. This should show why you want to use a small aperture when checking for dust and why dust is a bigger problem when using small apertures.
The aperture is the opening in the lens. A wide aperture (low f-stop number) is a big hole and a narrow aperture (high f-stop number) is a small hole.
A piece of dust isn't actually on the bit that does the sensing. On top of the sensing bits are other things like microprisms, anti-aliasing filters, and maybe evening a little protective coating. So the dust is sitting just a bit in front of the actual sensing parts.
When you are taking a picture with a wider aperture, light is hitting the sensor bits from a lot of different angles. A piece of dust might block some of the light, but other bits of light will get past it because they are coming in from other angles. When you are taking a picture with a narrow aperture, the light is coming through a much smaller hole. If there is a piece of dust in front of the sensor, it's going to block more of the light from the sensor parts behind it. In photography terms, the wider the aperture, the softer the shadow behind the dust spec.
So when you shoot wide open, the dust specs are softer and less noticeable. When you shoot with a small aperture, the dust specs are harder and stand out more. That's why you check for dust with a narrow aperture; you can see it better that way. It's also why dust is a bigger problem when you are shooting with a narrow aperture.
One other trick you can use when you don't have a solid colored surface for your dust check is to take a very out-of-focus shot using a very small aperture. The aperture size is what determines how hard the edges are for the dust spot. If everything else is extremely out-of-focus and soft looking, the hard edged dust will stand out more. At least that's the theory. I've never actually tried that but I've been told by others that it works for them.
1) How often (if at all) do you clean your DSLR sensor?
2) How do check to see if it is dirty?
3) How do you clean it?
4) Has getting a DSLR with the anti-dust shivering helped?
I'll start with my answers.
1) Only when necessary. It may be once a day. It may be once in a few months. I do it when I notice that it is dirty.
2) Sometimes I notice in shots that I've taken and that prompts me. Other times I check before I got on a big shoot. I check by setting the aperture to the smallest setting (highest f-stop) and either shooting through my Expodisc (it's like an extreme diffusion filter) or by shooting something with no detail (clear sky or solid cloud, a non-textured wall, or a campaign speech). Depending on my mood, I either look at the image on my computer or I look at it on the LCD on the DSLR. If I use the LCD, I magnify it as much as possible than then scroll across the entire image in stripes. I'm just looking to see if there is more dust than I find acceptable. It's just about never pristine.
3) I clean with a little battery powered blower. Following that, I either use a sensor cleaning brush or a Dust-Aid (a little sticky thing like a post-it note on a stick). If that still doesn't cut it, I use a pec-pad on a stick and wipe it.
4) My sensor only shakes when I'm hand-holding the camera, so I have no answer for this one.
The affect of aperture on sensor dust is interesting. When I first started shooting with DSLRs, this baffled me. Here's my attempt at explaining it. This should show why you want to use a small aperture when checking for dust and why dust is a bigger problem when using small apertures.
The aperture is the opening in the lens. A wide aperture (low f-stop number) is a big hole and a narrow aperture (high f-stop number) is a small hole.
A piece of dust isn't actually on the bit that does the sensing. On top of the sensing bits are other things like microprisms, anti-aliasing filters, and maybe evening a little protective coating. So the dust is sitting just a bit in front of the actual sensing parts.
When you are taking a picture with a wider aperture, light is hitting the sensor bits from a lot of different angles. A piece of dust might block some of the light, but other bits of light will get past it because they are coming in from other angles. When you are taking a picture with a narrow aperture, the light is coming through a much smaller hole. If there is a piece of dust in front of the sensor, it's going to block more of the light from the sensor parts behind it. In photography terms, the wider the aperture, the softer the shadow behind the dust spec.
So when you shoot wide open, the dust specs are softer and less noticeable. When you shoot with a small aperture, the dust specs are harder and stand out more. That's why you check for dust with a narrow aperture; you can see it better that way. It's also why dust is a bigger problem when you are shooting with a narrow aperture.
One other trick you can use when you don't have a solid colored surface for your dust check is to take a very out-of-focus shot using a very small aperture. The aperture size is what determines how hard the edges are for the dust spot. If everything else is extremely out-of-focus and soft looking, the hard edged dust will stand out more. At least that's the theory. I've never actually tried that but I've been told by others that it works for them.