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Can lenses be changed outdoors? If I am using a 50MM lens and want to put on a 24MM lens, can this been done when I am shooting outside in the daytime?
I know with a SLR Film Camera this is dangerous, but can it be done with a Digital SLR Camera?

2007-01-02 11:16:46 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Photography

8 answers

The lenses can be changed outdoors, indoors, daytime, nighttime, anywhere. My only advise is that you be very very careful not to allow any dust whatsoever to enter the interior of the camera. Dust and cameras don't mix! :)

2007-01-02 11:55:31 · answer #1 · answered by Patrick_T 1 · 2 0

I'm not sure why it would be "dangerous." The lens mirror protects the film and the CCD from exposure. The other problem is that you may get some dust into the mirror, but then again, as long as the mirror is down, the possibility of getting the film or CCD dirty is very remote, unless you change lenses in the middle of a sandstorm.

Lenses can be changed anywhere. Just exercise some precautions. Switch lenses quickly and protect your equipment from the elements when swithching lenses.. For digital photography, you dont have to worry about exposing the CCD or CMOS since you can always delete bad photos (unlike for film).

2007-01-02 13:19:29 · answer #2 · answered by nonoy 2 · 0 0

You can change any time for either medium. In both cases there is a shutter curtain (and the mirror) in front of the image capture medium. As others have mentioned, with digitial you need to do it quickly because dust can enter the camera when the lens is off and that dust can wind up on the sensor.

2007-01-02 13:34:10 · answer #3 · answered by k3s793 4 · 0 0

Changing lenses with a digital camera is more "dangerous" than with a film camera. Dust is a sensors mortal enemy. The only real danger is in dusty conditons or if you have a habit of dropping things.

2007-01-03 22:59:25 · answer #4 · answered by Bob 6 · 0 0

There is no light sensitive medium upon which to imprint an image. That is how light exposure will cloud or deteriorate a film image. The image of the picture is done in electronic impulses to the digital medium, and there is no means by which light can render the image unusable.

2007-01-02 11:21:31 · answer #5 · answered by Lance U 3 · 0 0

i think of 35mm sensor could be finished physique dslr(professional dslrs.) however the insurrection has a crop a million.6x sensor i think of(multiply that to the lens, its greater good fee to produce a crop sensor whilst in comparison with an entire physique, thats why finished physique sensors are in expert cameras). i'm not a specialist whilst it is composed of technicalities, yet i think of the lens which could comprise it 18-55mm(a minimum of that got here with my eos) could be around 35mm.. so at 22mm on the lens(x1.6)=35.2mm... btw is the 58mm lens you're speaking approximately, the clear out length? reason the 18-55mm has a 58mm clear out length. i can not truly help, yet with any luck i helped a splash. And the insurrection is a stable digital camera, I easily have canon 550d(T2i), yet even the older variations are nevertheless stable, its in particular the lens that concerns maximum. Edit: So i dont think of the sensor concerns on your case, because of the fact many "professionals" use crop sensors besides. And the 18-55mm lens could be around 35mm this is needed (at 22mm on your lens).

2016-10-19 09:25:10 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

There is no problem in changing your lens in day light when using digi. As there is no film to destroy.
Have fun with your digital.

2007-01-02 11:24:40 · answer #7 · answered by madmum 3 · 0 0

get a very good zoom 28-85 mm with a f2.0

this will cover all your needs

2007-01-02 11:21:29 · answer #8 · answered by Dimitris C. Milionis - Athens GR 3 · 0 0

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