04-14-2015 08:18 PM
anybody know the name of the little rubber plug designed to keep light leak from entering eyepiece. It is usually found attached to the strap supplied with EOS cameras. The larger eyepiece can be removed and the smaller rubber plug is inserted into the view hole. During long exposures, it prevents light from leaking in via the eyepiece area
04-14-2015 09:28 PM
04-14-2015 09:37 PM
04-15-2015 09:55 AM
I don't think its available separately, but it comes with the strap. Under $9 at Amazon.
04-15-2015 10:24 AM
" I wish canon would make an eyepiece with an open closed switch. I would buy that."
They do! Its on any of the 1D ___ series cameras.
04-15-2015 11:54 AM
04-15-2015 02:28 PM - edited 04-15-2015 02:29 PM
@garydillard wrote:anybody know the name of the little rubber plug designed to keep light leak from entering eyepiece. It is usually found attached to the strap supplied with EOS cameras. The larger eyepiece can be removed and the smaller rubber plug is inserted into the view hole. During long exposures, it prevents light from leaking in via the eyepiece area
It's called... YOUR THUMB! (That works just as well as the rubber piece. Maybe even better, since you don't need to remove the eyecup first.)
***********
Alan Myers
San Jose, Calif., USA
"Walk softly and carry a big lens."
GEAR: 5DII, 7D(x2), 50D(x3), some other cameras, various lenses & accessories
FLICKR & PRINTROOM
04-15-2015 02:36 PM
04-19-2015 10:33 AM - edited 04-19-2015 10:35 AM
Body cap fits snuggly on my 6D without removing the rubber eyecup.
Lens cap fits snuggly over the rubber eye cup of my 7D.
04-20-2015 02:32 PM - edited 04-20-2015 02:36 PM
@garydillard wrote:
amfoto1, obviously you don't do long exposure work. Try holding your thumb over the eyepiece for 5 minutes. Not to mention what it does to the steadiness of the camera.
Are you using an auto exposure mode when making a 5 minute exposure?
If using M or B mode, you really shouldn't need to cover the eyepiece. The mirror is flipped up against a light seal during exposure, blocking light from entering and reaching the sensor through the open shutter.
You really only need to cover the eyepiece when using one of the auto exposure modes (Tv, Av, or P), because the metering can be skewed by light entering the pentaprism via the eyepiece (when your eye isn't blocking the eyepiece). I believe the longest exposure possible on most Canon cameras using the AE modes is 30 seconds.
***********
Alan Myers
San Jose, Calif., USA
"Walk softly and carry a big lens."
GEAR: 5DII, 7D(x2), 50D(x3), some other cameras, various lenses & accessories
FLICKR & PRINTROOM
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