Congratulations on purchasing the SensorScope System. You are on your way to ensure that you produce the clearest photographs possible. Read this guide carefully before you start cleaning your digital SLR image sensor. This guide will help you clean your sensor safely and effectively.
DO NOT ATTEMPT TO CLEAN YOUR SENSOR WITHOUT READING THIS ENTIRE MANUAL.
You need to clean your sensor.
Dirty sensors are a real problem.
What you can’t see can affect your pictures. Dirt comes from many sources and it inevitably ends up on your sensor. If the dirt is not removed in a safe and effective way, your images will show this debris. Four common types of contaminants can get on your image sensor: metallic, fiber, organic and silica/quartz particles. Only the SensorScope System and Digital Duster System addresses all four types of material and the proper way to remove them safely. Cleaning is safe and easy. Anyone can clean an image sensor in just a few minutes. Clean all digital SLR cameras in four easy steps:
Step One: Set up your camera to be cleaned.
Step Two:Use the SensorScope to inspect your sensor. If it isn’t dirty, don’t clean it!
Step Three: Clean your sensor with the SensorVac and wet/dry SensorWands.
Step Four: Inspect your sensor with the SensorScope again. That’s it!
Take better pictures.
Cleaner sensors make cleaner images. Save time and money by taking cleaner images and minimizing time sitting at the computer with Photoshopо.
SensorScope just works.
No other product on the market is safer for cleaning your sensor.
With SensorScope you know if your camera needs cleaning and you know when to stop cleaning. The SensorScope combined with the SensorVac, SensorWands and SensorSolution makes it the safest and most effective system for cleaning your digital SLR image sensor. Educate yourself on the four most common types of contaminents that can ruin your photographs and your sensor.
Silica / Quartz: Very hard and abrasive particles such as sand or rock that can easily cause scratches and permanent damage to your sensor and filter surface.
Metallic: Magnetically active particles that are commonly drawn to the charged sensor and filter surface from the air and are stubborn and difficult to remove.
Fiber: Synthetic materials such as nylon that can easily fall from clothing into the sensor chamber. Non-approved sensor cleaning materials may also shed fibers onto your sensor during cleaning. Organic: Pollen, skin cells and small hairs are often introduced from the environment into your sensor chamber during normal operation and can chemically adhere to the sensor or filter surface.
Get pdf SensorScope System Cleaning Guide
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