Cold weather and an M6?

kchoquette

Established
Local time
3:46 PM
Joined
Nov 10, 2012
Messages
76
Location
Massachusetts
So I've been taking my M6 out with me basically every day this winter and probably after the first twenty minutes of shooting, the battery gets too cold for the meter to perform.

Of course I have extra meters, but I'm wondering if there's any way to prevent this from happening? Thanks!
 
So I've been taking my M6 out with me basically every day this winter and probably after the first twenty minutes of shooting, the battery gets too cold for the meter to perform.

Of course I have extra meters, but I'm wondering if there's any way to prevent this from happening? Thanks!

After 20 minutes of shooting in the cold, I prevent M6 meter failure by slipping into a Starbucks for 40 minutes. Works every time! 😀
 
In my experience shooting in the cold with the Nikon F3P, same batteries as my film MP... if the battery is near the end of it's life cycle the cold pushes it over the edge.
 
@Rob-F
Hahaha, I wish I could! But I usually find myself trekking pretty far into fire lines in a state forest to be able to take a nice deserved break like that.

@shimokita
I guess that settles it, in that case!
 
I've got an S2 that gives up the ghost when it's out in 25ºF weather for more than twenty minutes. I compensate by putting the neck strap around my neck (something I rarely do) and keeping the camera hanging under my coat, against my chest, until I see something I want to capture. As long as I'm not changing lenses, it won't usually fog up.

Best,
-Tim
 
In really cold weather (the Cascade mountains in winter), I carry a spare batt and swap them out frequently. Lithium batts are supposed to work better in the cold, but I've always had better results with a pair of silver oxide batts (even though they're fiddly to change while wearing gloves). Nikon used to sell an accessory for the FM2 that ran a power cord from the battery compartment on the bottom of the camera to a battery holder that you could wear inside your jacket.
 
Back
Top Bottom