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FORUMS Cameras, Lenses & Accessories Canon Digital Cameras 
Thread started 10 May 2004 (Monday) 11:16
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Wet Weather

 
J. ­ Cobble
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133 posts
Joined Jan 2004
     
May 10, 2004 11:16 |  #1

I may have to shoot in the rain this weekend at the races. What do you guys do to protect your equipment. ie, 1ds w/ 100-400?




  
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robertwgross
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May 10, 2004 11:20 |  #2

Transparent plastic shower cap with elastic around the bottom.

---Bob Gross---




  
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GenEOS
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Location: Pearland, Texas
     
May 10, 2004 11:21 |  #3

This may be too simple, but I find an ordinary tall kitchen trash bag to work to my satisfaction. I am not tryin gto be cute. I tried a store bought cover and found it to be to combersome. I poked a hole in the bag and stretched it around the lens hood, covered the camera and then poked a sall hole in the bag for the eye piece. I put the bag between the camera and the eye piece and that held the bag in place. reach under with one hand to work the zoom, or work it from the outside. No chimping allowed with this low budget device though....

It kept my D60 and 100-400 dry throughout a football game in a light-medium rain. I was soaked, but the camera, lens did not see a drop.


Daniel Tunstall
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Sports Shooter Member
http://www.sportsshoot​er.com/members.html?id​=2474 (external link)

  
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PacAce
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May 10, 2004 11:38 |  #4

GenEOS wrote:
This may be too simple, but I find an ordinary tall kitchen trash bag to work to my satisfaction. I am not tryin gto be cute. I tried a store bought cover and found it to be to combersome. I poked a hole in the bag and stretched it around the lens hood, covered the camera and then poked a sall hole in the bag for the eye piece. I put the bag between the camera and the eye piece and that held the bag in place. reach under with one hand to work the zoom, or work it from the outside. No chimping allowed with this low budget device though....

It kept my D60 and 100-400 dry throughout a football game in a light-medium rain. I was soaked, but the camera, lens did not see a drop.

Use a clear plastic bag and you can chimp all you want. :mrgreen:

Not sure how readily available the clear bags are but I do know they are available someplace.


...Leo

  
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Motorsports ­ Photo
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May 10, 2004 11:46 |  #5

big ziplock bag.

Test first to see if you can fit your camera/lens inside.

If it passes that test, cut a semicircle in one of the corners and make it just big enough to stratch over the end of the lens. Secure it with a wide rubber bandover your filter ring.

Why a ziplock?? so you can open it up and change batteries, cards, etc. and then easily seal it right back up.


Making Racers Look Faster than They Really Are! :)

  
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JoeTampa
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May 10, 2004 11:47 |  #6

Usually the clear bags are found as leaf bags or recycling bags.


<a href="http://www.notab​lephoto.com">Tampa Photographer</a>

  
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J. ­ Cobble
THREAD ­ STARTER
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May 10, 2004 13:55 |  #7

See, I knew someone on here would have a great idea!




  
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martcol
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May 10, 2004 14:00 |  #8

J. Cobble wrote:
What do you guys do to protect your equipment.

Errrrrr

Stay in :oops:


"All photographs are accurate. None of them is the truth."
Richard Avedon
www.imagesandwords.org​.uk (external link)

  
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Wickedfn4u
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144 posts
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May 10, 2004 14:43 |  #9

Good post idea is to buy some of the Dry-ease place it in the bottom of a Tupperware and seal your camera and or lens in it for a couple of days. Cheap precaution?

Cheers
TC




  
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KennyG
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May 10, 2004 15:47 |  #10

Wickedfn4u wrote:
Good post idea is to buy some of the Dry-ease place it in the bottom of a Tupperware and seal your camera and or lens in it for a couple of days. Cheap precaution?

Cheers
TC

No, it could sweat quicker than the moisture could be absorbed. Keep silacagel sachets in your camera bag and when you get home let the camera and lens slowly get to room temperature. Put them in in a bag that can breathe along with some more silacagel sachets.

The 100-400 is a long way from being weather resistant. Do not point the lens down if it gets wet or it will quickly fill with water. A plastic bag wrapped around the lens (fully extended) with the edge at the bottom, held on with tape or rubber bands, that allows the lens to zoom will do just fine. The 1Ds is sealed anyway, but you could allow part of the bag to cover the top of it to shed the worst of the rain.

I have worked in torrential rain with my 1D (same body as 1Ds) and 100-400L using the above method and have not had a problem.


Ken
Professional Motorsport Photographer
2 x 1D MK-II, 7D, 17-40L, 24-70L, 70-200 2.8L IS, 100-400L,
300 2.8L IS, 500 4.0L IS, 85 1.8, 50 1.4, 1.4 & 2.0 MK-II TC.

  
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J. ­ Cobble
THREAD ­ STARTER
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133 posts
Joined Jan 2004
     
May 11, 2004 14:36 |  #11

Unfortunately, staying in is not an option. :(




  
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