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Fungus in my sensor

otografias

New member
Hello everyone! I have had a problem with fungus on my sensor, I think it is on the ir filter that protects the sensor, although it has been cleaned and treated by a service technician, a trace has remained on the glass coating.
Do you know if there is a way to clean it, or remove the filter and work without it. What advice do you have for me? can I order a new glass (maybe anti newton)?
thank you very much !
 

Attachments

otografias

New member
It is beyond repair. On the one hand I can't find the official mamiya technical service, and in the photographic technical services they don't want to fix it, they can't find spare parts, and they don't want to risk it.
:- (
 

buildbot

Well-known member
It is beyond repair. On the one hand I can't find the official mamiya technical service, and in the photographic technical services they don't want to fix it, they can't find spare parts, and they don't want to risk it.
:- (
You can try reaching out to kolari vision - https://kolarivision.com/ - they were able to help me a few times get new cover glass swapped onto a digital back. I wouldn't use it if Phase One will service it and you can afford the 1K price from them, but kolari is perfect for older, less valuable DBs. Probably around 300-500 for a new filter.
 

otografias

New member
You can try reaching out to kolari vision - https://kolarivision.com/ - they were able to help me a few times get new cover glass swapped onto a digital back. I wouldn't use it if Phase One will service it and you can afford the 1K price from them, but kolari is perfect for older, less valuable DBs. Probably around 300-500 for a new filter.
hey! thanks I´ll ask for them .
 

chriswebb

Active member
There are also people out there who remove bayer filters off of color cameras to turn them monochrome. They do that by milling off the filter from the sensor somehow. They may be another option, but a lot more risky probably. I've heard some horror stories and I personally did not like the service I received from them either and decided to cancel my order so i didn't see their results first hand, but those places do exist for the long shot option. Don't take this as an endorsement of those services, just letting you know options.
 

buildbot

Well-known member
There are also people out there who remove bayer filters off of color cameras to turn them monochrome. They do that by milling off the filter from the sensor somehow. They may be another option, but a lot more risky probably. I've heard some horror stories and I personally did not like the service I received from them either and decided to cancel my order so i didn't see their results first hand, but those places do exist for the long shot option. Don't take this as an endorsement of those services, just letting you know options.
I think the issue is with the IR filter in front of the CCD, not the CCD itself having residual fungus.

And yeah, basically, from what I've seen they literally scrape the microlenses/bayer filter off. Silicon being harder to scratch, the underlying sensor is supposed to be "fine".
 

chriswebb

Active member
I think the issue is with the IR filter in front of the CCD, not the CCD itself having residual fungus.

And yeah, basically, from what I've seen they literally scrape the microlenses/bayer filter off. Silicon being harder to scratch, the underlying sensor is supposed to be "fine".
Ah that makes sense. I think I just saw fungus and thought destroy.
 

Pieter 12

Well-known member
Leica never called this problem fungus, but corrosion. Is it really fungus and does humidity have anything to do with it?
 

buildbot

Well-known member
Leica never called this problem fungus, but corrosion. Is it really fungus and does humidity have anything to do with it?
On a sensor, yeah I would be surprised to see fungus. I suppose it’s possible though? I know corrosion was a thing with Leica CCDs, I thought that was also cover glass related just that it’s fused to the sensor? I could be wrong!
 

Paul Spinnler

Well-known member
You can try reaching out to kolari vision - https://kolarivision.com/ - they were able to help me a few times get new cover glass swapped onto a digital back. I wouldn't use it if Phase One will service it and you can afford the 1K price from them, but kolari is perfect for older, less valuable DBs. Probably around 300-500 for a new filter.
Do they convert old backs to mono as well?
 

otografias

New member
There are also people out there who remove bayer filters off of color cameras to turn them monochrome. They do that by milling off the filter from the sensor somehow. They may be another option, but a lot more risky probably. I've heard some horror stories and I personally did not like the service I received from them either and decided to cancel my order so i didn't see their results first hand, but those places do exist for the long shot option. Don't take this as an endorsement of those services, just letting you know options.
that's very interesting, I didn't know about this possibility, is it the Bayer filter that I have in bad condition? I thought it was an infrared layer?
 

otografias

New member
I think the issue is with the IR filter in front of the CCD, not the CCD itself having residual fungus.

And yeah, basically, from what I've seen they literally scrape the microlenses/bayer filter off. Silicon being harder to scratch, the underlying sensor is supposed to be "fine".
I think the issue is with the IR filter in front of the CCD, not the CCD itself having residual fungus.

And yeah, basically, from what I've seen they literally scrape the microlenses/bayer filter off. Silicon being harder to scratch, the underlying sensor is supposed to be "fine".
And what would happen if I simply remove the filter? It would be very dangerous for the sensor... but in the last case I couldn't find a replacement, it could be a solution.?
 

buildbot

Well-known member
that's very interesting, I didn't know about this possibility, is it the Bayer filter that I have in bad condition? I thought it was an infrared layer?
It looks like the IR filter to me, not the sensor. I don't really know why bayer filters & monochrome conversion where brought into this. Fungus on the IR filter is not uncommon and looks exactly like this, and yeah it can etch the glass so cleaning does not help.

And what would happen if I simply remove the filter? It would be very dangerous for the sensor... but in the last case I couldn't find a replacement, it could be a solution.?
You lose the IR cutoff, and the focus will shift a bit. If you use an XF I think it would be possible to offset the AF enough to compensate, but manually focusing you'd be off. You'd also need to use an IR filter on the lens unless you want everything to look very red from the IR contamination.
 

chriswebb

Active member
It looks like the IR filter to me, not the sensor. I don't really know why bayer filters & monochrome conversion where brought into this. Fungus on the IR filter is not uncommon and looks exactly like this, and yeah it can etch the glass so cleaning does not help.
It was mainly a suggestion if it was a non-removable part of the sensor, i.e. like the bayer filter. Definitely not the right scenario here.
 

P. Chong

Well-known member
This happened to mine. Hassleblad changed the glass cover. Sensor was ok. But cost more than usd1k. In 2018. It’s been good since.

IMG_4182.jpeg
 
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