Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/07/27
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]John Collier wrote: > > Right now ROM is only "useful" if you have an automatic zoom head on your > flash. Personally, I would not bother with the conversion. John, With ROM, the R8 will know before firing what will be the real aperture (including vignetting which is different at each aperture and on each lens) in order to calculate more precisely the exposition. With lenses without ROM the camera will give an average result. Leica said also that small lenses with ROM permit shorter time parallax than bigger because, thanks to the ROM, the camera knows the exact delay before the diaphragm is closed and can start earlier the process of firing. With a 280/2,8 at f8 it will be longer than with a 19/2,8 at same aperture, or than with the same 280/2,8 at f2,8. With lenses without ROM, the camera will always choose the longest delay. With the APO-Extender 2X ROM (#11 269) the viewfinder will display the real aperture if used with a ROM lens, and the camera will know the new focal length of the lens (or zoom) and move the flash head accordingly. By the way, ROM are passive. They don't calculate anything. It's the camera which will calculate thanks the info stored at the factory inside the ROM. At the end of manufacture, or when retrofitting of older lenses, every Leica-R lens is individually measured and programmed in order to make sure that the potential accuracy of the exposure metering is maintained at each aperture. Two identical lenses may have different ROM's information inside. If, after the lens left the factory, there is a problem in the diaphragm mechanism, the ROM will NOT know it. :-( Now, is all this really useful ? I asked for the modification for lenses that I use with the APO-Extender 2X and/or flash. And I'm happy with the results (less mistakes). That's all I can say. Lucien