Polarizer or UV filter

OK - I've got both, but should I just keep the UV on the front of my lens or the polarizer (or both) - seems a hassle to take the CPL off all the time
Cheers
Cheers
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pharmer wrote:I did search - but nothing in the 2 pages of results appeared to answer my specific question
I wasn't asking what a polarizer does
I was asking do people keep it permanently on the lens in some cases
pharmer wrote:I did search - but nothing in the 2 pages of results appeared to answer my specific question
I wasn't asking what a polarizer does
I was asking do people keep it permanently on the lens in some cases
pharmer wrote:OK - I've got both, but should I just keep the UV on the front of my lens or the polarizer (or both)
Why not? Not even to protect the lens?digitor wrote: Personally, I would never keep any filter on my lens permanently.
tasadam wrote:Why not?digitor wrote: Personally, I would never keep any filter on my lens permanently.
tasadam wrote:Not even to protect the lens?
tasadam wrote:When I was heavily into my film stuff, I had a skylight filter attached to my lenses permanently, for physical protection.
digitor wrote:tasadam wrote:Why not?digitor wrote: Personally, I would never keep any filter on my lens permanently.
Because two extra air/glass interfaces can only degrade the performance of the lens. If the benefits outweigh the disadvantages of fitting a polariser, I'll put it on. Skylight or UV filters don't really do anything to help an image, using today's modern films, or digital.tasadam wrote:Not even to protect the lens?
Nope.
tasadam wrote:When I was heavily into my film stuff, I had a skylight filter attached to my lenses permanently, for physical protection.
Did you ever break one?
gstark wrote:Just as well that Wendell doesn't use Canon gear.
sheepie wrote:Occassionally I'll take the filter off if I feel it may be detracting from the shot (not too often).
Agreed! And it's not just rain, dust, sand, salt-spray, minerals from waterfall spray, animal saliva (ever tried a closeup with a wide angle of a Jersey calf?gstark wrote:I'd rather clean a $50 filter than elements of a $3K lens any day.
Well, it's usually more than half a second (and then you need somewhere safe to put the filter in the meantime) but in general you're correct.Don't want the extra air-to-glass surfaces when taking an image? No problem; it takes but a half second to remove the filter before taking the image.
Sounds like a generalisation to me. I don't know of a single brand that I haven't seen broken examples of!And I've found that only one brand survives drop tests wihout requiring a visit to the repairer.
sheepie wrote:gstark wrote:Just as well that Wendell doesn't use Canon gear.
God that's small! I had to copy and paste it into Notepad to read it!![]()
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For the record, I generally leave my CP on the 12-24, as it's mostly used for landscape shots (and I kindof like the very slight vignetting in the corners). Other lens I generally keep a UV filter on for protection. Occassionally I'll take the filter off if I feel it may be detracting from the shot (not too often).
timbo wrote:Hey Sheepie, do you use a standard CPL on your 12-24? I'm about to pick my standard Hoya CPL up for my 12-24, and have been reading the you have to use the extra thin one to avoid vignetting. Personally, I don't mind a slight amount of edge vignetting, and can always treat it in the RAW workflow as long as it's not too much.
DaveB wrote:Sounds like a generalisation to me. I don't know of a single brand that I haven't seen broken examples of!And I've found that only one brand survives drop tests wihout requiring a visit to the repairer.
sheepie wrote:timbo wrote:Hey Sheepie, do you use a standard CPL on your 12-24? I'm about to pick my standard Hoya CPL up for my 12-24, and have been reading the you have to use the extra thin one to avoid vignetting. Personally, I don't mind a slight amount of edge vignetting, and can always treat it in the RAW workflow as long as it's not too much.
I have the 12-24dx (Nikon) and a standard Hoya CP filter. The amount of vignetting is so small it's un-noticeable most times. Certainly not a case of the filter actually blocking the corners, more a slight darkening. IMO you'll be ok without the additional cost of a thin filter.
DaveB wrote:Fair enough Gary - we're each just reporting on our personal experiences and they're not necessarily the same.
gstark wrote:DaveB wrote:Fair enough Gary - we're each just reporting on our personal experiences and they're not necessarily the same.
Dave,
I'd be bloody frightened if they were.