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Simon Larbalestier
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Kim Coxon said:Hi Peter,
The Sixtomat Digital is a great meter to use. Very portable, accurate and easy to use. I am an analogue sort of guy and so initially the "menu" system took a little while to get used to but now it is great. The only "niggle" I have with it is the way the readout is presented. The Bar readout is quite small but I find it the most useful as a pictorial guide to the nearest F stop. The numerical one is large and easy to see but can be confusing initially. An exposure of just under F11 is shown as F8.9 (big 8, small 9) and so you could sett F8 when F11 would be better. Other than that, it is an excellent meter and very good VFM.
Kim
FWIW i'd second Kim on this i got one recently and use it a lot in incident mode.
The Calculite XP is also very good i gave one to nightfly (chris) i think that's his screen name? I dug out the old gossen Luna 6 yesterday and ordered up some new batteries for it. Spot meters are also worth if you're in the marketr for one: - look at the earlier Sekonic model 508 (not the slight larger and more expensive 608) i sold one of these off recently: flash and ambient zoom 1-4 degree spot readings and 3 memory capacity, all in a weathe resistant case
Top meter of all for me and fastest to use is the Digital Pentax Spot modified by zone V1 in the mid 80's. It came with a zone scale on the side of the scale and i just follow Fred Picker's advice: measure for the brightest part in the image - set the value given eg "15" at the "zone VII" on the provided scale and read off the exposure value - takes seconds and doesn't get fooled with tricky back light.
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