Nikon Lens Pen Cleaning System Reviews

Based on 0 reviews
Nikon Lens Pen Cleaning Pen System is a great accessory for any optics user, it is great for digital or 35mm camera, binoculars, spotting scope...and much more.
Questions & Answers (click + for answers)
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Q: Where can I find Nikon Lens Pen Cleaning System 7072 in the new york area?
okay so I brought the giottos cleaning kit which comes with everything, and I then applied the spray onto the cloth and begin to whipe the lens, after I was done I then took a quick flick to see if it worked a little and it didnt. Can any one help me out with my problem ?A:go to the B&H store in NY! they have everything you need, and wish you had for cameras! here is the directions: http://www.bhphotovideo.com/find/jsp/area_map.jsp
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Q: After comparing, my decision is Nikon D200 w/18-200 lens, your thoughts before I click BUY button?
Here is my order..any other MUST HAVE items you would add to list right now? Nikon D200 10.2MP Digital SLR Camera with 18-200mm f/3.5-5.6G ED-IF AF-S VR DX Nikkor Zoom Lens SanDisk SDCFX3-2048-901 2 GB Extreme III CompactFlash Card Nikon MB-D200 Multi-Power Battery Pack for the D200 Digital Camera Nikon EN-EL3e Rechargeable Li-Ion Battery for D200 Digital SLR Camera Nikon Digital & Film SLR System Case Gadget Bag for D200 Hoya 72mm DMC PRO1 Digital Multi-Coated UV (Ultra Violet) Filter Nikon Lens Pen Cleaning System Nikon Micro Fiber Cleaning Cloth Introduction to the Nikon D200 DVD Nikon D200 Digital Field Guide Total price with shipping: $2643.06 from Amazon.comA:This is the exact camera and lens that I use probably 80-90% of the time. I think Amazon has bumped up the "kit" with a few things that they get practically for free to cover the real expense of finding and selling the lens, which has been going for about $200 over retail. As long as you can accept the fact that you probably can't get it any other way, I say go for it. Now... You can probably do without the multi-battery pack, the lens cleaning stuff, the field guide, the DVD and the gadget bag. If you could only FIND the D200 and 18-200 lens at "retail" price, you could save about $500. The fact of the matter is simply that you can't find it, though. So I say buy what makes you happy. If you buy anything less, you will always look back and regret your decision. Who knows when the 18-200 will become widely available again? Okay, it's not the world's PERFECT lens, but it is not too shabby. As I said, unless I am doing something really critical, it is my choice for a casual "walk-around" lens. Go here and read Rockwell's review: http://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/18200.htm Go here and look at the sample images. Click on them to view them full screen. If you click at least once in the white space, your cursor will turn into a magnifier when you scroll it back over the image. Click again over the image and it will zoom to 100% size so you can really examine the image. http://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/18200/examples/index.htm "Optically, this lens is the best superzoom we’ve seen, though it’s not compatible with Nikon teleconverters, extension rings, or coupled macro bellows. It also costs about $300 more than third-party digital-only glass. But are extremely rugged construction, unusually well-controlled distortion, and four extra handholdable speeds worth the extra bucks? That, and more." http://www.popphoto.com/cameralenses/2763/lens-test-nikon-18-200mm-f35-56g-dx-vr-af-s.html




