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#2
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I put a tiny pack of Silica Gel in the housing.
I also got some stuff in a little bottle from Sony with a Cancorder housing (back in the 8mm days) and that is antifog. Maybe contact your local Sony dealer and ask them if they have any of that stuff? as a quick fix rub a little washing up liquid on to the inside of the housing and polish off.
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Nothing is foolproof to a sufficiently talented fool. |
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#3
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Mine fogs up if I take too many shots in a given period of time.
Only option is to turn it off for 10-15minutes. BUT. Putting the camera into its housing late at night, when the humidity and temp is low, does help prevent fogging.
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Ah! sir, live - live in the bosom of the waters! There only is independence! There I recognise no masters! There I am free! |
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#4
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The silica gel trick sounds good. Water temp has dropped radically due to wind and we had a couple extremely warm, humid days. I'm reluctant to use the defogger solution because it says it may screw with the image.
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#5
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had the same problem
silica gel helps (but only if it is a brand new sachet) load the camera somewhere cool turn it off in between shots so it doesn't get too hot that lot combined works for me...
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"stand up, move away from your computer and go somewhere you have never been before... a cafe, a country, a lake or an ocean....." (stolen and twisted by me) www.saltfreedivers.com www.learntofreedive.com www.saltfreedoubledip.com |