So I am in Bonaire for a week of diving. We do our check out dive and and couple of other dives the first day. That evening I get my camera gear set up. I am going to get my UK Germany LX5 housing wet for the first time since Uwe sent me a wet lens for it. We do the first dive and I take a few photos. As I enter the water for the second dive I wake the camera up and I see a water line in housing!!!! Ahhhh!! I swim like hell back to shore all the while watching the water line and waiting for the camera to die. Just as I reach shore I notice that the camera has not died. What the hell?? I look at the front and see water in the lens. Then it becomes clear - literally and figuratively. The wet lens was filling with water :-)))). I laugh at myself and then explain to my dive partners my irrational behavior as I swim back out.
I will up load a few photos for folks to critique here soon. In the mean time please laugh at my anticts :-).
The hazards of wet lenses (Bonaire)
Started by allen, Nov 09 2012 01:23 PM
3 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 09 November 2012 - 01:23 PM
#2
Posted 09 November 2012 - 08:22 PM
With flip diopter, u won't get any air bubbles, as long as u flip the wet lens when u are already in water
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#3
Posted 10 November 2012 - 06:25 AM
hehe, that's gotta cost you a beer or two..
Happy that it didn't flood though!
-Morten
Happy that it didn't flood though!
-Morten
Manager @ The Siddhartha Dive Resort & Spa, Bali
http://aquaticphotography.webs.com/
#4
Posted 10 November 2012 - 03:46 PM
LOL...more than a few of us on here would probably be swimming as fast as we could for shore if we saw water. Thanks for sharing - DiverPam
Nikon D90 in Aquatica Housing, Tokina 10-17mm, 60mm macro, 105mm macro, Sigma 17-70mm, + Ikelite DS 161 and DS-125 strobe combo www.flickr.com/photos/pammurph/
