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Sensor Cleaning Tips

Started Jan 13, 2020 | Discussions
mdavidp Senior Member • Posts: 2,436
Sensor Cleaning Tips

Hi  Any tips  or experiences cleaning the SD1

sensor?

ie, sensor brush, eyelead cleaner, wet method...

What do you recommend?

Thank you

Mike P

Sigma SD1
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SigmaTog
SigmaTog Senior Member • Posts: 1,114
Re: Sensor Cleaning Tips
1

The manual tells you how to do it......

xpatUSA
xpatUSA Forum Pro • Posts: 23,016
Re: Sensor Cleaning Tips

Quite odd, David. I clicked on the thread "Sensor Cleaning Tips" expecting to read some tips only to find that it was a question, duh.

Pardon my frustration ...

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Ted

 xpatUSA's gear list:xpatUSA's gear list
Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX1 Sigma SD9 Panasonic Lumix DC-G9 Panasonic Leica DG Macro-Elmarit 45mm F2.8 ASPH OIS Sigma 17-50mm F2.8 EX DC OS HSM +11 more
Dark slide Contributing Member • Posts: 972
Re: Sensor Cleaning Tips
2

Congratulations on passing 16,000 posts, a measure of how frustrating diligence can be.

FDecker Senior Member • Posts: 2,344
Re: Sensor Cleaning Tips
1

I use a blower (with an internal filter to have clean air). In addition, I use a special brush. I blow air through the brush to load it electrostatically and then I very gently brush over the sensor (I almost don‘t touch it) to pick up dust which couldn‘t get blown away. If this is still not enough, I use an adhesive stick from Pentax which is able to pick up stuff which sticks to the sensor.

Ceistinne
Ceistinne Veteran Member • Posts: 3,256
Re: Sensor Cleaning Tips
1

mdavidp wrote:

Hi Any tips or experiences cleaning the SD1

sensor?

ie, sensor brush, eyelead cleaner, wet method...

What do you recommend?

Thank you

Mike P

Mike,

A wet clean with Photographic Solutions swabs and Eclipse will leave it perfectly clean. Just be careful removing and replacing the filter.

S

 Ceistinne's gear list:Ceistinne's gear list
Sigma SD1 Merrill Sigma dp2 Quattro Sigma SD9 Sigma SD10 Sigma SD14 +5 more
Pete Stavrakoglou Veteran Member • Posts: 8,331
Re: Sensor Cleaning Tips
1

I try the easy steps first before progressing to other steps.

Step 1 - use a Rocket Blower, if that doesn't work...

Step 2 - use a nylon brush. Give it a blast with compressed air to give it an electrostatic charger so it will lift dust off the sensor. (never use compressed air inside the camera body). If that doesn't work...

Step 3 - use a viscous method (the Eyelead Cleaner you mentioned). I have the DustAid Platinum. If that doesn't work...

Step 4 - use a wet swap, I used the Copperhill cleaner.

Always make sure you have a fully-charged battery when you do the cleaning.

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My humble photo gallery: http://www.pete-the-greek.com

 Pete Stavrakoglou's gear list:Pete Stavrakoglou's gear list
Fujifilm X-S1 Sigma SD1 Merrill Canon EOS R Sigma 10-20mm F4-5.6 EX DC HSM Sigma 70-200mm F2.8 EX DG Macro HSM II +18 more
Scottelly
Scottelly Forum Pro • Posts: 18,026
Re: Sensor Cleaning Tips
1

Have you ever heard of the Arctic Butterfly? (No, it's not a sex position.)

I know a professional photographer who uses that thing before shooting (at every shoot).

Here's what I do:

NOTHING

Seriously . . . I have had my Sigma cameras (and my Nikon) for quite some time now, and I have never cleaned their sensors. Of course there are sensor spots in my photos, but I can touch them up, when I get a good shot. I've had my SD1 Merrill for more than two years now, I think, and I still haven't cleaned the sensor. Shame on me, huh? I'm afraid to clean it. I've read these nightmare stories about people breaking their IR filter/dust protector, and Sigma doesn't have them in stock (unacceptable!), so I've been afraid to try taking either of mine out of either my SD1 Merrill or my SD Quattro H, for fear that I'll break one. I don't bother with my Nikon, because I don't see much in the way of sensor spots in those photos. I did get a sensor cleaning kit recently though. Now I have to get up the courage to actually use it.

In the past I carefully used a brand new, clean cotton swab and some alcohol (to clean the sensors of my Sony A55 and my Sigma SD14). I had to do it three or four times, but eventually I did remove all the spots, and could shoot a clear blue sky at f16, setting my camera to ISO 100 and 1/60 second, while focusing at infinity, with no spots visible in the resulting photos. It seemed to work just fine.

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Scott Barton Kennelly
https://www.bigprintphotos.com/

 Scottelly's gear list:Scottelly's gear list
Sony SLT-A65 Nikon D810 Sigma sd Quattro H Nikon AF-S Nikkor 200-400mm f/4G ED-IF VR Sony DT 18-55mm F3.5-5.6 SAM +27 more
OP mdavidp Senior Member • Posts: 2,436
Re: Sensor Cleaning Tips

Thank you all!

Mile P

rick decker
MOD rick decker Forum Pro • Posts: 19,097
Re: Sensor Cleaning Tips

A lot of good choices...an easy way to start as far as first choice goes, is the electrostatic brush.  You can find good brush choices at an art store.  Then unless you are a scuba diver and have a tank of compressed air, get a canned air.  Whatever you do, your test should be at the smallest aperture (i.e. f11/16/22) as the smaller the aperture, the more revealing of the dust.  If the brush doesn't work than pick another.

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