Luckily, camera repair has plenty in common with watch repair, both deal with precise, small hand-held tools. Going to the watch repair department of your DIY shop can also be fruitful. I grew up in a watchmaking family so the tools and skills are all familiar to me.

I highly recommend that you follow my advice as close as you possibly can because tools like screw drivers seem to be common across the board but in reality they come in different types. Using the wrong driver type can result in a stripped screw head.


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Hello Rick,

wonderful guides. Repairing old lenses is my hobby. Most of the steps in your repairs are the same as mine. Except the tools(mine are not good). I live in Europe and its hard to find any Vessel screwdrivers here. Also its hard to me to identify them in Ebay (especially the different shafts) . If you could help me and show me some items i will be happy.

Hi, Angel!

I cannot access ebay from my studio. If the one from ebay is the longest one (like what I use) then it should be fine but it can be straining to used a long driver for every screw. In my experience, the long one can also be used on the smallest JIS screw there is. also, you only need the length for the added torque which may not sound much but it means everything.

Hello, Angel. Those drivers are too small but they are useful for smaller screws only. The long ones like the one I showed you is the most important one. Using these little drivers to open up bayonet screws and other bigger screws will only ruin the screws head.

The set of screwdrivers are necessary because they have different sizes suitable for the other screws in the lens. You can be sure if it is JIS by going to a remote control hobby shop and buying it there.

I have also bought the above set of small vessel screwdrivers, but has isolated pieces. Once again from the same shop. Very faire price. They have arrived this afternoon and they are, indeed, VERY nice pieces of hardware.

Glad you liked it, Carlos!

Be careful,though. There are many fake VESSEL drivers coming out from China, the land of the fake merchandise!

As for the screws, yes you have to be careful if the head is JIS or not but most important is the pitch of the thread. If it is wrong then it will destroy your screw hole and you will need to re-tap it.

You can look for JapanHobbyTools in Amazon, they are my supplier for grease. I got some grease, the same ones that Nikon uses but they are not cheap so I use it carefully. Alternatively, you can use Super Lube if you like. Just make sure that you use fully synthetic grease and not petrol grease. Silicon and lithium based grease are the best. Ric.

I read articles on this site and I think your post is very important element and has great information. I need to get a complete set. This is a review of the best precision screwdriver set on the market. All the best.

Hi, I was hoping that someone at ZWO would see this post in regards to adding camera support for two cameras that I think some astrophotographers are starting to take note of, the Sigma Fp and FpL cameras. Recently a use on the cloudynights DSLR forum has provided an ASCOM driver for the cameras that allows them to be controlled with full exposure (up to 30s and an additional 300s option), ISO, preview, power, and other support via the software NINA (windows based as I'm sure most are aware of). I'm wondering if ZWO would be able to port this ASCOM support of the cameras into the ASIAIR, I think it would be a great addition for those of us wanting to use these ultra-compact cameras with their setups. You can read more about the ASCOM support created by the CN member here: 

 -ascom-driver-for-sigma-fp-l/

Another FP and FP-L user here. Just weighing in to say that I would love to see support for this camera added as it's my main astro camera right now but ASIair is collecting dust because I can't use them together. Having to use a laptop instead.

The Nikon Zf is a 24MP full-frame mirrorless camera with classic looks that brings significant improvements to Nikon's mid-price cameras. We just shot a sample reel to get a better feel for its video features and have added our impressions to the review.

What's the best camera for travel? Good travel cameras should be small, versatile, and offer good image quality. In this buying guide we've rounded-up several great cameras for travel and recommended the best.

If you want a compact camera that produces great quality photos without the hassle of changing lenses, there are plenty of choices available for every budget. Read on to find out which portable enthusiast compacts are our favorites.

Above $2500 cameras tend to become increasingly specialized, making it difficult to select a 'best' option. We case our eye over the options costing more than $2500 but less than $4000, to find the best all-rounder.

In the list of supported cameras there is another section "Tier 2" which contains cameras that their raw converter can NOT decode. This section does include Sigma models and has the following gobbledegook:

The Tier 2 list below lists camera models that are also compatible with ON1 Photo RAW. You will be able to view, open and edit raw files from these camera models in ON1 Photo RAW, however, cameras listed in Tier 2 will not be opened and processed with the raw engine that is built into the ON1 Photo RAW. These files will be opened and processed using the raw engine that is built into your operating system. [WHAT ??????]

in ON1 Photo RAW, however, cameras listed in Tier 2 will not be opened and processed with the raw engine that is built into the ON1 Photo RAW. These files will be opened and processed using the raw engine that is built into your operating system. [WHAT ??????]

Same is true of Olympus RAW files. My PC can read Sony A7R RAWs but not A7R2 RAWs. I vaguely remember adding the Sony driver but maybe the Olympus one was installed by Windows during the many rounds of updates you go through when making a clean install, which I had to do after Onedrive killed Windows 10, spookily when you helped me with an X3F file.

The following are 3 sequential jpegs taken from a timelapse sequence done on an S5M2 with Sigma 100-400 lens. This is a recurring error (I have many examples now) that happens at irregular intervals of about 50-100 frames. This was taken indoors on a tripod with lens and camera both set to MF, lens stabilisation turned off. The error is the middle jpeg here which shows the moon dropped down a few millimetres in the sequence. This then reverts to the correct height in the following jpeg. Focus remains the same and no 'jello' is seen which would have been noticeable if it was a case of camera or lens bump. Any thoughts would be welcome!

Second: I'll ask the obvious question: are both the camera and the lens on the latest firmware? I do recall Sigma releasing new firmware on some of their lenses for use with the S5II; not sure if the 100-400 is one of them.

Hi - Thanks! Yes, I keep the camera updated - and as I understood it, according to Panasonic's guidelines on updating, if you update the camera with this lens (or other Sigma lenses) on the camera, the lens is also updated. 589ccfa754

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