

🧳 Elevate Your Gear Care Game!
The Photographic Solutions Digital Survival Kit is a comprehensive camera cleaning solution, featuring 24mm sensor swabs, a non-flammable cleaning solution, and lint-free wipes, all conveniently packed in a travel-friendly pouch. Perfect for photographers and videographers who demand the best for their equipment.










| ASIN | B08W28F7WY |
| Best Sellers Rank | #167 in Camera & Photo Cleaning Kits |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (53) |
| Date First Available | February 5, 2021 |
| Item Weight | 4.2 ounces |
| Item model number | Aeroclipse |
| Manufacturer | Photographic Solutions |
| Package Dimensions | 9.61 x 6.22 x 1.26 inches |
M**.
Comentarios: La verdad logré limpiar excelentemente mi sensor con esto estoy contento gracias si lo recomiendo
C**.
It's Great!!
Glad I found this product. Very easy to use. My Nikon D7200's sensor it ckean again!!
G**N
Nice kit for cleaning camera sensors and lenses.
If you have a DSLR/Mirrorless camera and use more than one lens, EVENTUALLY you will end up with stubborn dust on your sensor or a fingerprint/smudge on your lens. This could derail a photo shoot if it happens in the field, so it's good to be able to clean your own camera and lenses. If you use this kit with care and as directed it will get things clean. This kit includes swabs for cleaning your sensor, non-abrasive "pec pads" for cleaning lenses and some pre-moistened/wrapped "pec pads" (like wet naps) that are easy to carry for cleaning emergencies when you don't have the whole kit with you. It also includes a carry pouch to keep all the cleaning supplies organized. Be sure to order the right size swabs for the size of your camera's sensor. Also this manufacturer offers a choice of cleaning solutions. One uses a flammable (alcohol I think) solvent and the other one is non flammable. They say both solutions work equally well. The first type dries quicker but may not be allowed on airplanes because it is flammable. On amazon you should be able to get identical kits with your choice of solution. Be sure to read the full instructions on the vendor's website before using!! Most people who get "bad" results either used too much or too little cleaning fluid. Whether you are cleaning a lens or sensor, try using a bulb blower or lens brush to get rid of the dust first (don't use canned air or high power blowers, it can damage the camera). If all else fails, use these wet cleaning pads. These pads are super clean and non-abrasive, but it's still possible to scratch something if the dirt you are trying to get off is abrasive, like sand. Overall, these are cheaper than taking your camera to a shop, if you can even find a "pro" camera shop that does cleanings these days, the last one near me closed ages ago. It's also better than sending your camera to the manufacturer for cleaning which could leave you without your camera for weeks.
R**Y
Mustafaa every photographers kit
I really like this sensor cleaner because it has different size cleansers for different size sensors. I have a PSC and I have CMOS sensors 35 mm and I have medium format so the fact that they have a kid that can help me clean all of my cameras and remove the Modeste Erickson Cearley appreciate the cleaning process was nerve-racking, but surprisingly very very simple and easy to do I like it also comes with a little bag so I can carry with me and keep it for when I’m out in the field ease-of-use I would say to the stream the easy to use. They have a Lotta very small packages to make the show that they have a lot of consideration on cleaning your camera in a safe place after cleansing my sensor all dirt that was on there was gone immediately the solution drive pretty quickly and left most weeks. All of my concerns were completely redundant because it was easy simple process and I usually go to my senses clean and paid $50-$80 in the past now I will always use this kit and do it myself.
T**3
BEST SENSOR CLEANER, JUST BUY THEM!!!!
First, I recently became a Vine reviewer and purchased many of the products I have seen or reviewed with my own money. I first purchased this product in San Francisco several years ago when I was shooting a private event for Michelob Ultra called Michelob Ultra MOVEMENT, a Fitness event. I remember vividly learning about this product. Someone told me to get it at a San Francisco downtown Camer shop, pulling in and buying it. "PED IS THE BEST, BUY THEM ALL." I had yet to learn about the brand, the quality, or what these things were. I would always send my camera and lenses to Canon to get cleaned because it was just part of the service day offered with the Canon Care Pak, which is their extended warranty and maintenance program. After looking at a few videos on YouTube, it's pretty basic about what you have to do regarding cleaning the sensor or the back of the sphere of a camera. As I mentioned the first couple of times, it will be a challenge depending on your sensor size, so you need to get the correct sensor millimeter they come from. It's 14 mm to about 26 mm, so if you have a full-frame camera, you'll need a more oversized Swab, and if you have an APC camera, typically, they're smaller sensors. In this kit, what you see below, I typically would carry anywhere from 10 to 40+ of the wipes that come with it, the sensor cleaner, and about 10 sensor one-time-use devices. As soon as I get done cleaning the sensor, I would typically use that same thing as it's a one-time use to clean some other stuff on the camera that is quite hard to get to, and I would use isopropyl alcohol for my gear. With isopropane, I typically buy the one-by-one square at Costco, which comes in four boxes for about five dollars. I would take 10 to 15 of those and throw them through every bag to clean anything. I recently discovered more giant, isopropyl alcohol pads, which are 6 x 6 or more significant and look like something you would clean your hands with at a restaurant after you eat. Just make sure you get ibuprofen alcohol. I also would keep a couple of cotton swabs on me to get no smaller areas in the camera. I typically clean my gear before every event for anywhere from 20 minutes to an hour. That's on top of only some of my SD cards, making sure I have backup cards and backup batteries ready for the war, as I like to say, Event photography because it is a war. Now that I have three of these, I keep one in my main bag, my backup bag, and my Northface duffel bag when I travel. I've used these because it's got a loop on the belt to keep SD cards, CFexpress cards, and, just in case, a few business cards. I cannot stress the importance of a clean sensor, especially when going to a big event when you're getting paid thousands of dollars to shoot and put out content within the next 5 to 10 hours. One day, it happens to everybody. It doesn't matter if you're professional or amateur; you'll look at your pictures on your laptop and see these dots. They typically look like water from rain, but they're tiny, and then they're like arbitrary dots everywhere. You'll see the screen and think it's either on your lens or, typically, not the sensor. Now, I shoot with 2 CANON R3s and my R5 as a backup. What's nice about the camera is that you have a little shutter as soon as you turn the camera off. It is like a window down; nothing can get into the sensor. People who don't have this option often need to realize how much dust gets into a sensor. Just on a typical regular shoot, there's so much in the atmosphere that you don't see it. There have been times that I've been shooting in southern Utah, which is Moab somewhere in the mountains, or a dry environment like Arizona or somewhere in the ocean in California where sometimes I clean my sensor once or twice a day because the climate is so brutal. Still, you have to make sure because you're providing a service to a client, and honestly, this is the best of the best for a company. I have several products I've purchased from Amazon or Adorama with my own money, with over five products. Their HEPA filters are excellent for blowing out sensors and anything on the camera. In the next 2 to 4 weeks, I'll do an in-depth review on YouTube and post it here so everybody can get an excellent idea of what I'm talking about seeing as believing, as I like to say. It's something you throw into your bag. You forget about it. You're sitting in a hotel, and suddenly, you see some dots on your sensor, and you don't know where they're from. Then the PANIC starts because you don't have a cleaning kit. Being diligent before or after the event to clean your sensor is the best way to be proactive versus reactive. For every event I shoot, I typically take a couple of hours before looking at the sensor, look at every single lens I have and my backup camera or my secondary camera, and make sure we're good to go touch everything up the day of the event take about an hour and just relax make sure you have your back up cards at your back up see if express cards back up batteries. Art of war: if you fail to plan, you plan to fall in every war battle one before it's ever fought, and that is especially true being a professional photographer or shooting any event if it comes to corporate professional conferences, sports, motorsports, and extreme sports. I just shot ANIME NYC 3 weeks ago. Any questions about gear or their products? JUST BUY THEM ALL. TM
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