I've experienced condensation many times in the summer when going out  
from a cool, dry air conditioned house into the hot, humid backyard.  
Condensation forms on the front lens element. I don't know if I get  
any inside. I never wipe it. I just let it sit until it clears up. It  
usually only takes about five minutes. Once it took twenty minutes.  
Never caused any problem and left no residue on the lens. It's  
distilled water after all. It should be quite clean. I've never seen  
any condensation on the camera to speak of. If there was any, it  
didn't affect it. That's true of both the K10 and the D.
Paul
On Nov 17, 2007, at 12:53 AM, Boris Liberman wrote:

> Hi!
>
> Suppose I hadn't got lucky and condensation did occur.
>
> 1. What to do in case of just external condensation? Wipe it off  
> and go on?
>
> 2. What is internal elements of the lens suffer from condensation?
>
> 3. What about the sensor and the camera internals?
>
> I will probably take with me a small hair-blower (right word?) just in
> case, but still any advise will be appreciated.
>
> Boris
>
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