Didn't you have a hood on? Looks more like an edge impact to me that a hood would have saved.
Sorry, but I would never spend a couple of quid on a filter to put on the front of my multi hundred pound optics![]()
Just ordered a load more off Amazon...they're going at half-price at the mo'...
Linky?![]()
Sorry, but I would never spend a couple of quid on a filter to put on the front of my multi hundred pound optics
i dont understand, do you not have one, or do you but a really expensive one which does exactly the same job, as quoted by various monthlys and a few pros
There have been plenty of threads with examples of filters cheap and not so cheap affecting image quality, also with cheap filters there is a higher risk of ghosting and also light reflecting between the lens and the filter causing image problems, these are partly caused by the cheaper grade of glass being used and also by the filter not being coated as well.
I'd rather use a sawn-off milk bottle than no filter at all...
very true for where you are. hope you are keeping safe.
No... suffering a Crisis of Enthusiasm today...

Didn't you have a hood on? Looks more like an edge impact to me that a hood would have saved.
Sorry, but I would never spend a couple of quid on a filter to put on the front of my multi hundred pound optics![]()
How much shock absorption do you reckon that filter has? Would having no filter have meant that you got a smashed front element, or would it have meant you had a front element that didn't get a crap load of broken glass flung at it?
PS> That's a question, not a loaded statement.
How much shock absorption do you reckon that filter has? Would having no filter have meant that you got a smashed front element, or would it have meant you had a front element that didn't get a crap load of broken glass flung at it?
PS> That's a question, not a loaded statement.
This has happened a few times to me - once the filter ring was so badly bent that it had to be carefully sawn off the lens - no amount of 'wrenching' would shift it...
The glass shards aren't an issue as they only lie on the front element as opposed to being 'flung' at it and as long as you brush them off carefully there's virtually no chance the coating will be damaged. Unless you try and wipe them off with a finger or cloth, that is...
A lens hood will do more to protect from impact-damage to the body of the lens, but a filter will do more to protect against flying debris, dust and water-spots - anyone who's had to try and scrub off salt-water rings will know that it can be impossible to remove all the drying residue...
I still say - and I've been at this for 30 years now - that any filter is better than none when outdoors - even kids indoors tend to spit, dribble and otherwise eject substances you'll not be wanting on your lenses...
Preferably a lens hood and a GOOD Pro-filter from Hoya or Nikon, but at a pinch, anything is better than nothing...
If you only do studio work, disregard all I've said.
got to be the best couple of quid you will ever spend
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What would you do in the case of something like a Nikon 300 f/28 that doesn't take a filter? I know it has a built in protector over the front element, but still a right few quid to replace. Mind you I'd imagine a 112mm filter wouldn't be cheap either....
this is why we buy UV filters
This is why we don't!
http://www.talkphotography.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=130960
Shame some of the best examples are no longer hosted, but it's an interesting thread.
Woot...![]()
My Remembrance Parade pics are all over the PA website...
Feeling much better now...
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Oh yes...three bananas good...lol
There are times to use a filter and times not to. You don't use a flash on every shot because you understand its purpose and its limitations. Filters are just another accessory which have their uses when required.
Windy day at the beach? Put a filter on. Working in the desert with helicopters etc (Arkady) then use a filter. Photographing Motorcross - depends on where you are but generally you are going to use filter.
Photographing the kids in the front room then leave it off.
Personally I rarely use them and only when needed. The lens hood does a far better job of stopping the usual accidental knocks. What the lens hood cannot protect against is fine hard particles blowing directly at you. You sacrifice a bit of image quality to protect the lens in these circumstances. For general walkaround use if I smack the lens and a filter cracks there is more danger of putting a serious scratch on the lens from the hard glass splinters.
As with most things in life it is finding that balance between the risk of damage from not using one and the risk of damage from using one. For most of what I shoot it is a wasted piece of glass waiting to get broken but for others it is an essential piece of glass protecting an even more expensive piece of glass (again Arkady is the good example here).
Yes, I have a few in the bag but I only use them when I need them. Pretty simple really.
John
Rob
Have you got a link ? I have looked on the PA website and can't find them or do you need to register first ?
Richard
hahahah...
OK, so the one time you definitely don't put a filter on is when you do some tired old shots from a Motorway bridge...or anything else when point-light sources are shining directly into the lens...
But for practically everything else...![]()
The kind of work I'd be using for a heavy old beast like that would be sports, so less liklihood of serious trauma resulting from falls, helicopter crashes or incoming artillery-fire...![]()
