Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Eric Welch wrote: > > At 12:35 AM 9/6/99 +0800, you wrote: > >Have U used an OM-4 or Ti before ? U might just be surprised at the level of > >sophistication (and/or convenience) its multi spotmetering facility has to > >offer with regards to the actual process of 'making' the picture. > > I don't care if it's an OM-4Ti or Deep Blue (the computer that beat > Kasparov in Chess). I can out-think a computer when it comes to making > exposures in difficult light. Convenience is great, and the Nikon F5 seems > to have the best on-the-fly metering around. For push button spot metering, ><Snip> I have a "hi light" button on my Minolta spot meter. It seems to give you 2.3 stops. It is useless to me because why should a hi light be 2.3 stops? If such a thing were configurable it would have some use. For me as we were saying a day or two ago the significant highlight for black and white would be 3 over. If I could configure a meter for that I could hit that hi light button like crazy and it would make for a faster operation for me. A hi light button one stop over for slides would be great I would take reading off the low sky hit the highlight button and run with it. If I could configure a shadow button for 2 under I would get great use out of that too. -2.7 on my Minolta meter is meaningless for me and I would have to write it on the meter to remember what their parameters are. Where did they get 2.7 or 2.3 from? What would Olympus consider a highlight? Who the heck knows and what would the odds be that that would have some meaning to a particular photographers way of working that day? Mark Rabiner