Filter cleaning

9 replies383 views
Arun H avatar
Given all the issues I have with fully correcting dust motes, stains, and the like on my RGB filters, I finally decided to clean my filters and the IR/UV cut glass on my camera. What methods have people found to work best?
Well Written Engaging
Tony Gondola avatar
After blowing off the dust I would think you can't go wrong with a high percentage alcohol, 90%+ as a solvent. If it's clean after blowing off the dust, I wouldn't even do that.
Ashraf AbuSara avatar
Would follow Chroma's recommendations. I would start with air bulb. If all most of the dust is gone and the image does not show drastic dust motes, I leave it at that. Otherwise follow the guide:

https://www.chroma.com/support/knowledge-center/cleaning-filters
Bill McLaughlin avatar
Yup...... air bulb (I use a "rocket blower") and optical methanol and lint free wipes. I use Eclipse lens cleaner and PEC pads wipes. Just be sure to keep the eclipse away from anything painted (like flat black) as it will dissolve the paint.

Rocket Blower

PEC Pads

Eclipse

There is a bit of technique in that you need to apply the Eclipse and quickly wipe then use a dry PEC to polish and do it fast before streaks can show up.

Some white thin and snug cotton gloves are a good idea as well...
Helpful
Arun H avatar
Thanks, guys. I have been using 90% alcohol and Kim wipes, but never was fully successful… though was more successful than ever last night. One of the big issues is my inability to verify that the filter is fully clean until I actually image with it. At which point, it is a royal pain to remove it again. I ordered the Eclipse and PEC pads, in the hope that it is a bit more fool proof than the alcohol and Kim wipes method. I did use nirtile gloves last night, which probably made a difference. Even handling the filters with bare hands using just the edges seems to create issues.
Helpful
Jordan Morley avatar
I use lens pen and or air brush and compressor
Anderl avatar
The only not commonly done thing i do if i clean my filters is to blow ionized air (hairdryer of my wife) on it. I do that since i had aggressively stucking dust on an optolong filter. After blowing ionized air on it, the dust just fell off.
Tony Gondola avatar
Related discussions
Adding "L" Data To RGB Data in Pixinsight
I have been struggling with my first LRGB dataset of M33 for several months now. I have been an OSC shooter for many years and have enjoyed OSC processing. I added a Minicam8 mono to my kit awhile back and have had tons of fun with mono processing, b...
LRGB processing involves RGB filters; cleaning filters is prerequisite maintenance.
Jan 4, 2026
Advice on duo-band filter selection for astrophotography setup
Hi, I am looking to expand my astrophotography setup with a duo-band filter. Well, possibly two depend on how the pricing goes. I’m looking to have my feel-pinions validated and possibly a correction from someone who knows what they’re talking about....
Duo-band filters are optical components; cleaning methods apply to filter maintenance.
Aug 31, 2025
Cleaning sensor (player one poseidon C pro (imx571))
Hi, I encounter some issue with my player one Poseidon C pro. It’s a telescope on a pier on western Europe weather. I have some leaks on the sensor (never opened). See picture attached. What are you recommendation? Is that possible to remove the fron...
Sensor cleaning addresses dust and contamination issues similar to filter cleaning.
9 days ago