How Did This Full-Grown Fly End Up Inside a Sealed $2,000 Camera Lens?

BY admin April 12, 2019 Gadgets 4 views

The next time you’re peering deep inside one of your camera lenses and discover a tiny speck of dust, don’t complain. After 15 months in rotation, the folks at Lensrentals had a Canon 70-200mm f2.8 IS II lens return from a rental with a full-grown (but dead) fly trapped between a pair of lens elements inside. It’s not…

Photo: Lensrentals

The next time you’re peering deep inside one of your camera lenses and discover a tiny speck of dust, don’t complain. After 15 months in rotation, the folks at Lensrentals had a Canon 70-200mm f2.8 IS II lens return from a rental with a full-grown (but dead) fly trapped between a pair of lens elements inside. It’s not uncommon for dust and debris to find their way inside a sealed lens, but this fly had to be an especially determined photo-bomber to get in there.

How exactly the fly got inside is still a bit of a mystery. It took one of Lensrental’s technicians a full hour to just disassemble the long lens before he got to the elements serving as the fly’s final resting place. It took another 45 minutes to clean out everything the fly left behind, which included not only droppings, but also dried guts as the technician’s amateur forensics determined the insect had ultimately been crushed between a pair of moving glass elements. Gross.

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At one point the fly was alive, which resulted in more than just its carcass that needed to be cleaned out. It left many deposits inside the lens before it finally bit the dust.
Photo: Lensrentals

The technicians at Lensrentals suspect the fly entered the lens somewhere around the rear baffle (close to where the lens connects to a camera). But given the small size of the gaps in that area, it most likely entered the lens while it was still in the maggot stage, and spent its adolescence trapped in a maze of moving parts. How it got enough food to survive for as long as it did is yet another mystery. Are flies a natural known predator of autofocus motors?

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Worried about those tiny specks of dust inside your lens? This photo was snapped using this lens while the dead fly was still inside.
Photo: Lensrentals

The estimated cost for the cleaning was around $369 given the hours needed for disassembly, cleaning, reassembly, and recalibration of the lens. But as Lensrentals points out, it’s a great example of why you shouldn’t freak out at every tiny speck of dust you spot in your own lenses. The test chart photo above was taken while the fly was still stuck to the glass element inside the lens. Do you see any sign of it? There’s not even a hint of the fly until the lens was stopped down to f/13, at which point a dark shadow started to appear.

Dust and dirt are an inevitable part of photography, even if you only ever shoot indoors. In some situations it can be problematic for photos (be very careful whenever your camera’s sensor is exposed during lens swaps) but it’s no reason to hide your gear away and never use it. A tiny smudge on a photo is better than missing a memorable shot altogether.

[Lensrentals]

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