Using a camera in the winter

cp_7

Member
I have used a camera outside in the winter but haven't filmed outdoors for extended time. Is it bad for a camera to go from really cold to warm to quick? I know it fogs up but is there a way to fix that and keep it from happening?
 
Can be bad. Worse when you go back out with it fogged and the condemnation freezes. To avoid it, keep your camera in your bag when you go inside, at least 15-30 minutes, but it really depends on the temperature difference as well. You just want to warm it up as slowly as possibly, so the deeper in a bag, the better. Silica gel packs are great, but if I forget them or I only have a small setup (1 body, 1 lens, or I used to this with a large point and shoot), I wrap it in a t shirt, put that in a ziplock, then throw that in my backpack. Worked fine for me. I have also had a lens fog up before. It isn't good to get in the habit of it, but I let it sit for a while and it was fine.
 
13075766:p.hawks said:
Can be bad. Worse when you go back out with it fogged and the condemnation freezes. To avoid it, keep your camera in your bag when you go inside, at least 15-30 minutes, but it really depends on the temperature difference as well. You just want to warm it up as slowly as possibly, so the deeper in a bag, the better. Silica gel packs are great, but if I forget them or I only have a small setup (1 body, 1 lens, or I used to this with a large point and shoot), I wrap it in a t shirt, put that in a ziplock, then throw that in my backpack. Worked fine for me. I have also had a lens fog up before. It isn't good to get in the habit of it, but I let it sit for a while and it was fine.

thanks this helps a lot
 
What I like to do to avoid condensation problems is simply put my camera in my car when I'm done with it, so when I leave and put the heat on the camera can warm up slowly.
 
Back
Top