File :-(, x, )
1 Anonymous
Hey /p/...


can I clean my sensor with computer duster?
>> Anonymous
1. Don't clean your sensor.

2. *Don't clean your sensor*. You almost certainly don't need to.

3. Use a blower bulb if you have to clean your sensor, which you don't.

Love the EOS toy though. :)
>> Anonymous
I haven't cleaned it for about four months now.. done a lot of lens changing... some spots, too..
>> Anonymous
>>297904
> done a lot of lens changing
Not relevant.
> some spots, too..
Consistently, on every photograph?
>> Anonymous
dont use the computer duster, it's full of dust and the sensor generates a fuckton of static; it'll stick like white on rice.
>> Anonymous
>>297910
Thanks for an answer!
>> Einta !!MWv3ICYobCM
>>297910
You should NOT use a computer duster, but that's not why. [By the way, full of dust? wtf...]

You can (and often will) completely screw your sensor. I've had someone come in who'd killed their D3 cleaning it with a computer duster. I don't know if it's simply the pressure, or that they managed to shoot liquid instead of gas, or if it's due to it being not air but difluoroethane.

In any case, it's a good way to destroy a camera.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
can I has your 'puter duster?