felixcat8888
Senior Member
lastboltnut said:In the site 1/3 down there is a paragraph:
lastboltnut said:But How Much UV Can a Digital Camera Really See?
UV sensitivity seems to vary from one digital camera to the next, but most digital cameras seem to be substantially less UV-sensitive than film. In fact, few digital cameras are UV-sensitive enough to reap a noticeable optical benefit from UV filtration, even in the most extreme UV conditionsat very high altitude (well over 10,000 feet) or in very long shots over water. A good quality multicoated neutral UV filter is as good a choice as any for a lens protector if you feel compelled to use one, but don't expect to see much of a benefit in your digital images.
Anyway, it is not too important lah. BTW, if you permanently put the UV filter on with the adapter, you camera become longer huh? Actually I have the UV filter, which Felixcat8888 gave to me free when I bought his adapter.![]()
I used the UV filter on the adapter permanently fixed there. More of a protection for the lens than for UV shots. That is why the UV filter costs only $10/-

Having bought the Lensmate Adapters, I now have 2 more filters attached permanently on too. More for protection than anything else.
