Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/04/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Well, I cranked out my original post late last night, and looking at it now, I see I omitted the basic point: Flicking the frame selector to the finder frame for a lens 50% longer than the one you're shooting with serves only to show you the approximate area that is covered by the metering system. For example, if you're shooting with a 50mm lens, the frame lines for the 75mm lens will show you the "spot" covered by the metering system. It doesn't change the metering itself. Hope that clears things up a bit. Chuck Albertson Seattle, Wash. At 09:12 AM 4/19/96 -0400, William Hong wrote: >On Thu, 18 Apr 1996, Charles E. Albertson wrote: > >> As a rule of thumb (and I got this from the late Andrew Matheson's >> book, "Leica M6: Rangefinder Practice M6 to M1), use the finder frame for >> the lens that is 50% longer than the one you are metering through. For >> example, click the frame selector to the 75mm frame if you're metering with >> a 50mm, use the 50mm frame is you're shooting with a 35mm, use the 135mm >> frame for the 90mm lens, etc. It seems to work OK for me. >> >> ---------------------- >> Charles E. Albertson >> Seattle, Wash. >> chucko@mail.eskimo.com >> > >Jonathan Eastland's Leica M Compendium also mentioned this technique, but >it doesn't seem to work on my M6. Flicking the frameline selector >doesn't see to change the metering at all. I don't understand how this >would work. Since the framelines come up in pairs, how would it know to >meter with the 35mm line, not the 135mm line, and the 28mm line, not >the 90 mm line? > > William Hong > hong@cps.cmich.edu > >