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Jammed lens hood on the f4 300mmPro
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Re: Jammed lens hood on the f4 300mmPro
Touch wood it hasn't happened to me yet. However I have found that it is easier to turn the hood by pinching it between my forefinger and thumb on one side and twisting it. If you hold it by both sides and attempt to turn it I think it can be deformed slightly which makes it harder to turn.
Ron
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Re: Jammed lens hood on the f4 300mmPro
Originally posted by Olybirder View PostTouch wood it hasn't happened to me yet. However I have found that it is easier to turn the hood by pinching it between my forefinger and thumb on one side and twisting it. If you hold it by both sides and attempt to turn it I think it can be deformed slightly which makes it harder to turn.
Ron
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Re: Jammed lens hood on the f4 300mmPro
Originally posted by Olybirder View PostWow, I thought it was worth a try but I wasn't really convinced it would solve your problem. Glad it worked for you.
Ron
A light spray on a piece of cotton wool then applied to the barrel of a zoom lens cures stiffness when zooming etc. the same applies to many types of lens hoods.
Conversely, normal oil causes plastics to bind.
Just a thought
Jax
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Re: Jammed lens hood on the f4 300mmPro
Originally posted by Jax View PostI know some will recoil in horror at this suggestion but...... Silicone G|rease or Silicone Spray Lubricant applied very carefully and thinly works wonders on plastic to plastic or plastic to metal.
A light spray on a piece of cotton wool then applied to the barrel of a zoom lens cures stiffness when zooming etc. the same applies to many types of lens hoods.
Conversely, normal oil causes plastics to bind.
Just a thought
Jax
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Re: Jammed lens hood on the f4 300mmPro
I have got a can of Silicone Spray somewhere. I use it on my curtain rails to make it easier to open and close the curtains and it works like magic.
I don't think I will use it on the 300mm lens hood just yet as I haven't had a problem with it jamming. In fact I actually have the opposite issue. I keep my camera in a holster and I find the action of taking it out and replacing it tends to undo the hood after a while. I have to keep checking that it is still extended properly. It would be nice if it clicked into position but then it would probably give more problems with jamming.
Ron
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Re: Jammed lens hood on the f4 300mmPro
I wouldn’t use silicone lubricants on a lens body. Silicones are known to migrate and are difficult to remove, making a mess of an optical surface if they got onto it. If applied to the barrel of a zoom lens, I would worry about them migrating inside the lens and affecting the electronics or aperture mechanism. If you want to try, use the tiniest quantities only.
Definitely don’t use mineral oil based lubricants on plastic.
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Re: Jammed lens hood on the f4 300mmPro
Any 3rd party replacement for this?
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Re: Jammed lens hood on the f4 300mmPro
Had this happen with my 300mm f4, even before I'd ever attached it to the camera.
Gently warming the lens hood with a hair dryer, soon released it.
In case you're all wondering... no I don't carry a hair dryer in my camera bag
Mark
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Re: Jammed lens hood on the f4 300mmPro
I suspect that a silicone treatment is applied during the manufacture of lenses. Silicone treated surfaces have a characteristic slippery 'feel'. Also, water droplets bead off a new lens is a way that suggests silicone to me.
I have a can of 'dry' silicone spray that I occasionally apply to a tissue and then wipe my zoom lens barrels. I also do the same to the hood bayonets.
Jim
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Re: Jammed lens hood on the f4 300mmPro
Originally posted by Jim Ford View PostI suspect that a silicone treatment is applied during the manufacture of lenses. Silicone treated surfaces have a characteristic slippery 'feel'. Also, water droplets bead off a new lens is a way that suggests silicone to me.
I have a can of 'dry' silicone spray that I occasionally apply to a tissue and then wipe my zoom lens barrels. I also do the same to the hood bayonets.
Jim
Given the amount of plastics and neoprenes used now, silicone in it's varying forms, is the most useful lubricant out there.
Jax
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