Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]From: Godfrey DiGiorgi <ramarren@bayarea.net> Sent: Sunday, September 19, 1999 00:48 Subject: Re: [Leica] Consistent underexposure problem > Minolta meters are excellent: well made, reliable, > good features, very accurate. Good. I recognized the other names in connection with meters, but I had never associated Minolta with meters. I got a Minolta anyway because it was the only spot meter. I'm pleased to see that they have a good reputation in this domain. > Personally, I'd return it. Both your F5 and the M6 > have reflective, selective area "spot" meters in them. The F5 has a true spot meter (1% of the image or so); the M6 does not. A lot of the time, the M6 meter area will cover a large area of what I want to photograph, and it's difficult to know how it is averaging that area. A spot meter will let me actually pick tiny parts of the image and see how they should be exposed, and then arrive at a general exposure. Once I see how this relates to the M6 meter, I can use mostly the M6. However, it's always nice to have a meter around in case I ever need it for something. > It's the same thing only the reading is > constrained to a smaller spot. The size of the spot might make a difference! If the M6 spot covers both bright sunlight and shadow, or, worse yet, some specular highlights, it might be handy to use a spot meter to see how the M6 is treating these different areas. > An incident meter is less expensive and meters in a > way which is different from the spot meter, which makes it > more valuable as an addition to your photographic toolkit. I dunno. Sunlight and shade are pretty constant; it isn't necessarily required that they be metered. And most of my subjects are lit in different ways at different points; just knowing what kind of light is falling nearby won't help me, nor will it account for very high or low reflectance in the subject. I figured that the spot meter would help me to understand situations like this. With practice, I'll be able to wing it myself with the M6, but I imagine I'll still keep the meter, just in case. I might eventually buy an incident meter, however, just for the sake of completeness (only after I win the lottery, however, at the rate things are going now). > True. However, I find I keep using the incident meter > for flash setups and for tricky lighting when it's difficult > to find the correct exposure. Indoors or outdoors? > And for testing equipment. You really like to test equipment, don't you? -- Anthony