Andreas Thaler
Subscriber
The Nikkor Micro 55/2.8 tends to get oil contaminated on its aperture blades.
The tutorials I found on the web show removing the aperture register, disassembling it and cleaning the aperture blades individually. Then everything is put back together.
This takes a certain amount of effort, and installing the aperture blades requires a good night's sleep and a lot of patience.
I wanted to see if it didn't work the short way too.
The candidate from my A portfolio.
This means that nothing should go wrong when cleaning
The oil contamination is sufficient to stick the aperture blades together.
After removing the bayonet ring, the retaining ring of the rear lens unit can be unscrewed and its individual elements can be lifted.
The rear lens unit consists of four elements.
The aperture blades are located directly underneath.
But also the next lens, as my “dipstick” shows.
This means that when you apply the cleaning remedy, you don't want any of it to get on the glass.
First I try isopropyl alcohol.
But it doesn't clean the back side of the blades satisfactorily.
But Zippo lighter fluid does the job.
The lighter fluid runs around the blades and dissolves the oil.
I move the aperture blades and dab them with cleaning swabs, in several passes.
Finally, quick drying with the hot air device.
Gentle and not too hot.
Some small droplets of the emulsion splashed onto the lens underneath.
I remove these with a cleaning swab and isopropyl alcohol.
I wipe away any remaining streaks with a piece of my Zeiss lens cleaning cloth.
Exceptionally dry so that no new streaks appear.
The inside of the bayonet ring is also cleaned with alcohol.
The tutorials I found on the web show removing the aperture register, disassembling it and cleaning the aperture blades individually. Then everything is put back together.
This takes a certain amount of effort, and installing the aperture blades requires a good night's sleep and a lot of patience.
I wanted to see if it didn't work the short way too.
The candidate from my A portfolio.
This means that nothing should go wrong when cleaning

The oil contamination is sufficient to stick the aperture blades together.
After removing the bayonet ring, the retaining ring of the rear lens unit can be unscrewed and its individual elements can be lifted.
The rear lens unit consists of four elements.
The aperture blades are located directly underneath.
But also the next lens, as my “dipstick” shows.
This means that when you apply the cleaning remedy, you don't want any of it to get on the glass.
First I try isopropyl alcohol.
But it doesn't clean the back side of the blades satisfactorily.
But Zippo lighter fluid does the job.
The lighter fluid runs around the blades and dissolves the oil.
I move the aperture blades and dab them with cleaning swabs, in several passes.
Finally, quick drying with the hot air device.
Gentle and not too hot.
Some small droplets of the emulsion splashed onto the lens underneath.
I remove these with a cleaning swab and isopropyl alcohol.
I wipe away any remaining streaks with a piece of my Zeiss lens cleaning cloth.
Exceptionally dry so that no new streaks appear.
The inside of the bayonet ring is also cleaned with alcohol.
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