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have a camera with EV scale on it. How do you use the EV scale?
What cameras were made this way?
Thanks
What cameras were made this way?
Thanks
fidget said:This is an interesting thread, and a good question.
I must admit that I thought that if I told you (anyone) that a particular scene I metered was at EV16, say, that you would know how bright that is.
But....my Gossen Digisix might give EV16 when the film speed is set to 1600 and EV14 when set to 400 (not surprisingly). So, it seems to me, that the EV number alone is not enough to describe a light value, wouldn't you need to know the film speed metered for?
Am I missing something here?
fidget said:Thanks for the explanation bmattock. It makes sense.
Back to the OP, my Voigtlander Vito B has a numbered scale and a mechanism which locks the aperture ring to the shutter speed ring so that they can be moved whilst keeping the same relative settings.
Eh? The pentax digital spot meter I used with 4x5 had LV readouts, the Minolta Spotmter F does EV (which numerically coincides with LV for ISO 100 - I prefer using LV as a matter of convenience). I bet a lot of tourists are really hung up on the zone system.lZr said:EV shots are for tourists. If you want to be more creative, it is better let the aperture to be the leader, or the speed dial. EV values are mathematical creatures