How to stop the fog up

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I usually flush my cam housing with air from the cylinder. This air is dry (it should be....). My personal home-brewn procedure is:
- Flush the empty housing (blow air into it)
- Put the cam in
- Flush again
- While flushing close the lid

I usually put a silicagel bag into the housing as well.
 
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Dee, only a woman would think of that procedure.

Submariner, I don't get bags from them. I use a nylon stocking but not assembly line produced as Dee did.
 
Time to send the wife to the store to buy me some pads! Thats a good idea though Gilligan, just in case you do get a small leak. And I'll try the nylons, that is easier then sewing my own bags.
 
TedJ:
Dee has been watching too many sausage making shows on Food TV.

PPbbbbttttt :cheeky: :D
 
Dee:
cheryl..I think you can gt bags from them but a nylon works well. I use the packets, too but the little bags like Gilligan make are great. I made a bunch of them at one time from a pair of panty hose. Using a tablespoonfull of the dessicant, I tied them all at once then cut them apart. I cut the foot off and tied the first tight knot. From there it's gel-knot-knot-gel-knot-knot-gel-knot-knot-gel-knot-knot-gel-knot, etc. Then I cut between the knot-knots. Understand?

That's ingenious! Right on sister! :thumb:

And Ted.. you leave my galpal Dee alone. You don't want Beast or Scubapearce knocking on your door one night to talk to you about this! :wink:
 
At some kraft stores or supermarkets have cloth reuseable tea bags that should be about the correct size to go underneath or beside the camera in the housing. C-5000 and PT-019 housing.
 
I just ran into this the last time I used my camera. Opposite situation. I changed the batteries on my digital topside in fifty-plus degrees (no choice) and the water was in the low forties. Condensation from the air topside was really fogging up my lens. The dessicant eventually worked, but I was advised to put anti-fog on the inside of the housing.

I am seeing many good ideas here as well.
 
Dee:
PPbbbbttttt :cheeky: :D

Remarkable, that's exactly what my accountant Marjorie says to me on numerous occasions, and believe me I listen to her. :cheeky: :cheeky:

Actually the technique works great for saving onions too. I just don't cut them apart until I want to use them and then I cut them off from the bottom one at a time.
TedJ
 
I use dricap (the brand) desiccator capsules, model 14 (8x40mm cylinders). A bag of 100 is available from www.tedpella.com for about $25. I use two inside my casing, and put them in the night before. It works like magic! No matter how cold/hot it gets, there is no fog. Strangely enough, when I use anti-fog in addition to the capsules, there is a better chance for condensation. I've found that condensation is like ice - it forms first where there is dirt on the lens. The inside of the lens has to be surgically clean. As long as i don't need to open the case, all is well. If I need to open the case, I try to give it as much time as possible before going into the water and add a fresh capsule; sometimes I will get a little fog when this happens, but it goes away in 10 minutes or so. The capsules can be recharged a few times in a toaster oven, and they change color to indicate enhaustion.
 
https://www.shearwater.com/products/teric/

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