Jared White
April 25th, 2007, 01:15 AM
Hi everyone,
I bought a Promaster UV filter a couple of months ago for my XH A1 since I wanted to protect the lens, and subsequently took a whole bunch of footage out in the bright sun near the beach while on vacation.
Just recently I started watching through all the footage I took (yeah, I know...lame...) and realized to my horror that much of it is all but ruined. Smear, dust spots, outrageous flare, all kinds of stuff...and I remember cleaning the filter as best I could tell.
So last night, I took the filter off the camera and peered into a bright light with my eyeball, and found out that it was indeed smeary and spotted. I tried really really hard to clean the UV filter with Promaster's cleaning formula and wipes...didn't work. In fact, it practically was making it worse! Then I tried using water and soft cotton rag to clean it, and that worked a bit better, but it still wasn't working very well. I could stick it over my own eyeball and the picture would get smeary.
Of course, YMMV, but I'm definitely throwing this thing in the closet and getting something usable. It sounds like the Hoya Supercoated filter is well-respected, so I'll give that a try. I shot some test footage this morning with my bare lens, and it looked awesome, so I know the camera's fine. I don't want to degrade the image quality of a $4K camera with a cheap filter!
Regards, Jared
I bought a Promaster UV filter a couple of months ago for my XH A1 since I wanted to protect the lens, and subsequently took a whole bunch of footage out in the bright sun near the beach while on vacation.
Just recently I started watching through all the footage I took (yeah, I know...lame...) and realized to my horror that much of it is all but ruined. Smear, dust spots, outrageous flare, all kinds of stuff...and I remember cleaning the filter as best I could tell.
So last night, I took the filter off the camera and peered into a bright light with my eyeball, and found out that it was indeed smeary and spotted. I tried really really hard to clean the UV filter with Promaster's cleaning formula and wipes...didn't work. In fact, it practically was making it worse! Then I tried using water and soft cotton rag to clean it, and that worked a bit better, but it still wasn't working very well. I could stick it over my own eyeball and the picture would get smeary.
Of course, YMMV, but I'm definitely throwing this thing in the closet and getting something usable. It sounds like the Hoya Supercoated filter is well-respected, so I'll give that a try. I shot some test footage this morning with my bare lens, and it looked awesome, so I know the camera's fine. I don't want to degrade the image quality of a $4K camera with a cheap filter!
Regards, Jared