Michel Hardy-Vallée
07-12-2006, 04:06 PM
It occured to me that screwing in/out a lens in its mount must create micro-abrasion at some point, so I was wondering if it is eventually important to have some care done on either the lens mount or the camera body mount.
Mind you, all my M42 lenses are 30+ years old and all work fine, but perhaps that is because they had been cared for in the past?
Claire Senft
07-12-2006, 04:11 PM
Without sand or other abrasive it will take an awful lot to put appreciable wear on the mount or lens. The screw mount is slower but it is much more relaible than a bayonet mount. Nreechlock lenses were a sturdy mount also.
Paul Howell
07-12-2006, 04:31 PM
Mind you, all my M42 lenses are 30+ years old and all work fine, but perhaps that is because they had been cared for in the past?[/QUOTE]
I have owned many of my M42 lens for almost 40 years, (bought my first body and lens set in 1969) and I have not taken any unusal measures to care for either the cameras mounts or lens, not one is even close to wearing out. I have dead meters but my camera bodies are still very solid and the lens are just as sharp as they were day I bought them.
Gerald Koch
07-12-2006, 04:42 PM
Screw mount lenses are in a sense self adjusting since you screw them in until they are snug. Wear is more a problem with bayonet mount lenses which tends to wobble with wear.
Michel Hardy-Vallée
07-12-2006, 04:51 PM
Without sand or other abrasive it will take an awful lot to put appreciable wear on the mount or lens. The screw mount is slower but it is much more relaible than a bayonet mount. Nreechlock lenses were a sturdy mount also.
Interesting, I would have thought bayonets were sturdier because of less movements. Is it the complexity of the locking system that is in cause?
Michel Hardy-Vallée
07-12-2006, 04:52 PM
I have owned many of my M42 lens for almost 40 years, (bought my first body and lens set in 1969) and I have not taken any unusal measures to care for either the cameras mounts or lens, not one is even close to wearing out. I have dead meters but my camera bodies are still very solid and the lens are just as sharp as they were day I bought them.
Sums it up for me; I'll take the usual care of my equipment and not worry about anything else. Thanks for confirming.