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If only it were that simple...You know the old adage, you get what you pay for.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
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If only it were that simple...You know the old adage, you get what you pay for.
Someone did ask me that question, but don't remember if it was you. Yes, I have removed the skins with zero issues. No residue, no stickiness, just a nice clean surface. Keep in mind these are Alpha Guard skins. I have no experience with any other brand.That looks really nice. I may have asked you this before. have you successfully removed a skin before selling the equipment? I recently sold my EOS R with the skin on it, but I was a bit afraid of removing it as it had been so well "stuck"...it didn't show any signs of coming off.
Just installed the newly arrived "Nocturnal Waves" Alpha Guard skin on my new RF 45mm f/1.2 lens.
Well, I'm 71 and I had no issues,. but I could see where it might be problematic for someone with shaky hands (in which case I'd just get someone else to apply them). But in general, no they are not hard to apply at all. There is a QR code with it that you scan with your iPhone (or smart phone) and it takes you to a web page with the layout of the pieces and shows you where each piece goes. I just start with A1 and work my way through the letters/numbers in sequence.That does look nice!
Question: Were the skins easy to apply - or was it a PITA? How long did it take? As I grow older, I find myself a bit challenged when installing/aligning the transparent screen guards on my cameras and this looks like it may well require similar levels of acuity.
Arriving today:
ASUS RT-BE88U Dual-Band Wi-Fi 7 Ai Mesh Extendable Performance Router
A bit of FYI: I use magnetic filters as well. Kase Wolverine, K&F, and Urth magnetic filter systems play well with each other. They share the same polarity and stack well with each other if needed. Freewell filters apparently have the opposite polarity.I ordered a 10 stop ND filter for my new RF 14-35mm lens in anticipation of land or seascapes where I might want water to have that silky smooth effect. I had a variable ND but it has banding when on a super wide lens. I always use a UV to protect the front element and hate having to unscrew one for the other so I ordered a K&F magnetic ND from Amazon. I put it on and quite liked it, color seems neutral and didn't vignette. So, I ordered a K&F magnetic UV to replace the screw on one. It arrived but I returned it for another as the magnet was so weak that it barely stayed on. I've had decent luck with other K&F stuff, filters etc. so not sure if this was just a QC issue. Hopefully the next one has a stronger magnet like the ND has.
A bought an Atorch DL-24 load and battery tester. Third party LP-E6 batteries, and probably other battery types for Canon, do not fully and honestly communicate with the camera. The chip in the battery always lies to the camera and reports "I am in excellent condition and I am functioning at 100%", regardless of the truth. I even emailed with a battery manufacturer here in Germany and they told me that their batteries communicate information with the camera, but they can't speak for how the Canon camera interprets the information as that is proprietary to Canon. So, I wanted to be able to test and track the performance of my third party batteries to eliminate the duds.
Plus...I really love testing things and recording data....I know.....I am embracing my inner nerd.
To be able to connect an LP-E6 to the DL-24, I first used an old cheap LP-E6 charger and hard wired it to connect, but the battery resistance values were outrageous, so with the help of Google Gemini, I decided to purchase a used Jupio battery grip for a Canon 70D which also uses LP-E6 batteries. You can see the two connected below. I have been testing batteries this week and finding interesting things. At some point in the future I will try to make a post with my results of original Canon batteries and various third party batteries.
Oh...I bought a pair of SmallRig LP-E6P compatible batteries as well which should arrive tomorrow.
You brought back a memory for me. As a boy-young teen, I had my father's old Hallicrafters Radio in my room. I would stay up late at night in the summer and listen to stations in Europe and Asia as well as all over the USA. For a Mississippi boy in the late 70#s, it was fascinating. We had a very large mimosa tree outside by bedroom window and we put an antenna pretty high up in this tree and it opened up the world for me.Nifty!
Your post has remined me that many years ago, there used to be a company called HeathKit which would sell you all the components necessary to build a box (thermometer's, barometers, radios, TVs & such). The kits were complete with every last resister, capacitor, wire harness, relay, LED, power supple, case that you'd need put it together. The instruction manuals were works of art, with exact step-by-step detail on what goes where. All I had to do is provide a soldering gun. My grandfather, who was a master electrician at Ford Motor Company, bought me a HeathKit thermometer as a gift for my 10th birthday. He helped me put it together. I was hooked!
Good memories.
You brought back a memory for me. As a boy-young teen, I had my father's old Hallicrafters Radio in my room. I would stay up late at night in the summer and listen to stations in Europe and Asia as well as all over the USA. For a Mississippi boy in the late 70#s, it was fascinating. We had a very large mimosa tree outside by bedroom window and we put an antenna pretty high up in this tree and it opened up the world for me.
Very cool!
Are you a ham? I have my General license but never got around to getting my extra. Purely local stuff for me, no LF as my homeowner's association would frown up hanging wires up in trees (I did have a slingshot thingy for launching a wire waaay up there, but never used it). I used to be more active in our National Weather Service SkyWarn program - running network operations at the local NWS office during severe weather and relaying reports to the meteorologist in charge. Great fun and a good public service.
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A used Fujifilm GFX 100s arrived today with a SmallRig baseplate and some extra batteries. Purchased on EBay, the camera looks brand new and appears to be 100% functional, although I won't know for sure until the Pentax A-645 35mm f/3.5 lens arrives on Friday. With tax and shipping, the body was $3400 and allegedly has only 2700 shutter activations (KEH has a similar unit with one battery for $4300). The shipping label says it was sent from a commercial photographer in Santa Ana, CA, so this feels like a good deal to me. https://www.tsutsumidapictures.com/about