05-13-2018 11:36 AM
Does anyone know of a cheap source for lens caps? I seem to lose mine in the field. The cap I had for my Canon 18-135mm STM costs $8, which seems high.
I do keep a UV or polarizing filter on, especially in some of the harsher environments. Once in the field, I remove the cap for the day, but I like to keep a cap on until then. Or do you guys dispense with the cap entirely?
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05-13-2018 01:06 PM
2 or 3 years back I bought some center pinch caps (all as 77 mm replacements but there is a good variety of sizes available) from an Ebay seller based in China for under $3 each & free shipping. Took 2 or 3 weeks but they fit great & were worth the money. I bought lens hoods from another seller & they worked great too but took longer to get here.
05-15-2018 11:58 AM - edited 05-15-2018 03:05 PM
@ebiggs1 wrote:I hardly to never use or have a lens cap. Most full timers and pros don't use lens caps at least the ones I know don't. Mostly goes back on when I put the lens away in its bag where it does a magnificent job of protecting it.
I have to confess I'm baffled by that. Ernie loves lenses. He's owned most of the lenses Canon has ever made and a good percentage of those made by several other manufacturers. Full timer or not, how can such a committed connoisseur eschew lens caps? It's like a coin collector storing his collection in a plastic bucket.
05-16-2018 10:00 AM
"It's like a coin collector storing his collection in a plastic bucket."
I beg your pardon, I use Tupperware ! Lenses are just tools.
05-15-2018 04:04 PM
@ebiggs1 wrote:I hardly to never use or have a lens cap. Most full timers and pros don't use lens caps at least the ones I know don't. Mostly goes back on when I put the lens away in its bag where it does a magnificent job of protecting it.
Well, about the only time I put the cap back on is when I am finished in the field. As I say, I usually have a filter on (UV or CP), as I am often in the desert or around tidepools.
I never keep the cap on in the field, or walk around with it, as I have missed some shots that way and learned early on that a shot missed is gone for good. You can't pose wildlife like you can friends or family. But once done for the day, I like to put the cap on as I would rather it absorb any undue scuffs, bumps or jostling around rather than a B+W filter. YMMV.
05-20-2018 02:47 AM
I replaced all of my Canon older lens caps with the center-pinch after-market ones. They work just as well.
05-20-2018 08:49 AM
@diverhank wrote:I replaced all of my Canon older lens caps with the center-pinch after-market ones. They work just as well.
If you say so. Center-pinch caps are usually thicker in the middle, and not all lenses have enough clearance to accommodate them. I believe that's why Canon tends to use center-pinch caps on their telephotos, but not on their wider lenses. If you use Canon's intended cap, the lens won't get scratched.
05-20-2018 09:35 AM
Happily there were no such scratches...(I had made sure there was enough room). I've been using them way before Canon comes out with their own.
05-20-2018 09:36 AM
" If you use Canon's intended cap protecto filters, the lens won't get scratched."
05-20-2018 11:02 AM
@ebiggs1 wrote:" If you use
Canon's intended capprotecto filters, the lens won't get scratched."
Yup. And, I admit to being blind in one eye makes me a real goofball when it comes to replacing a lens cap.
Sometimes, I reach to remove the lens cap, only t find out that I already removed it, and I smearing the lens filter.
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