M Lenses aren't all that well sealed.  On the other hand I've gotten a
couple of my M lenses fairly wet taking photo's in bad weather to no apparent
ill effects.  Your lenses didn't go swimming did they, I would think that would
be bad.

At 06:17 PM 12/31/2002 +0100, you wrote:
Hi,
   I have a few questions to ask before leaving. I just returned from
   outside (-10celsius) where I photographed some dusk landscapes lit
   by multicoloured fireworks (I didn't plan on the fireworks, but
   they lit indirectly the landscape very nicely). With the LX on
   auto, and M lenses (the "new" M75-150/4 proved itself nicely).

   I used a small canvas "camera" bag, which isn't sealed. So upon
   returning home, the LX and lenses got lot of condensation...

   I was pretty confident that the LX can take it without any problems
   (is that so? it was dripping with moisture, but metered and motored
   fine), but what about the M lenses? I kept the zoom in a sealed
   case, but a M 2/35 was on the body and was "dripping" too (no fog
   inside though). How well are the M lenses sealed? Should I worry?
   How about shooting in rain? Again, the LX can cope with it, but the
   lenses? On some reportages, I shot in rain because there was no
   other option, and it wasn't raining much. But still I would like to
   hear some of the experts opinions.

  And now the sad story (extreme example of above theme)

   Yesterday I saw my friend, a Pentax collector (he had big problems
   with several LXes, even AFTER sending them to Pentax Belgium for
   repair). He has an eye on K2DMD plus MD motor for his collection.
   He was persuading one person to sell him both, partly in exchange
   for a modern AF SLR. But the K2DMD can grow on you, sentimentally
   (mine certainly did). Yesterday I saw the K2DMD in his shop! "You
   must be certainly glad that you finally persuaded the person. It's
   more pride of your collection that your LX". Sadly he brought the
   camera to me, and said "Lahovice". That's one of the suburbs of
   Prague that got about 4 meters of water during the summer
   catastrophal floods. Opening the camera revealed completely rusted
   inside, the film rails were partly eaten away, etc - ruined, a wreck.
   Just the brass outside survived well. He then told me, that the
   person owning the K2DMD came to him three months after the flood,
   with the K2DMD and wanting him to get it repaired... while all the
   time it had been stored with water inside. He has a Vivitar S1 zoom
   which still has water inside the optics, there is about two cups of
   water sloshing happilly inside, even after so much time. It's a
   great pity because if restored immediately, the camera could have
   been saved, maybe. Now, after so much time in water, it's a wreck
   (there are sadder parts to this story, as anybody who has been
   flooded knows. It's nothing wonderful). There is also a brighter
   (although cynical) side to this story: with the demise of this
   K2DMD, all our working nice K2DMDs just got somewhat rarer and
   more pricey...

Good light,
     Frantisek Vlcek
Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend.
    Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read.  --Groucho Marx

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