oltimer
Well-known
Mine is the Gossen Profisix, with attachments.
No matter what one's presuppositions might be, I'd urge trying one of the better iPhone apps. I've noticed these described here with what seems like a feeling of "they're good enough to use if I don't have my good meter with me". My guess is that you'll find one of these might be better, or at the very least, as accurate as the dedicated meter you are using now, no matter what that might be. Often more highly featured and with a greater range of capabilities as well.
People seem to use the Light Meter app a lot. I have that one, and the Luxi app as well, but neither one of these is as good as the myLightMeter Pro app I usually use. This provides incident (I use a Luxi diffuser for this) and reflected modes as well as calibration, spot metering for quick easy determination of the dynamic range of a scene, two different interfaces for ease of use in a variety of situations, plus a well written manual and much more, as well as great developer support if necessary. Link below, along with a link to the developer's more recent app which I have not yet tried.
I know it sounds like he's paying me, but just a satisfied customer.
https://itunes.apple.com/es/app/mylightmeter-pro/id583922375?l=en&mt=8
https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/light-meter-wheel/id720707253?mt=8
Over the years I've owned a number of meters by Gossen, Seconic, Weston and others. Presently I have:
Two Gossen Pilots (my most used meters. They are simple, accurate as needed, rugged, easy to use and small.)
...
Of all those meters, the Gossen Pilots are most suited to my analog photography today.
How does the Gossen Pilot perform in low light condition, says indoor shooting?
I found some good deals on ebay but just want to confirm before purchasing.
Thanks.
It is a selenium meter, so it starts at a modest EV 5 or 6. The same goes for every selenium meter. Even the large round cell pro meters from Weston or Sekonic only reach down to EV 4, which any cheap CdS meter will do (the most sensitive silicone ones reach to -6). Selenium meters are limited to handheld photography with ISO 400 film, anything more low light calls for a battery powered meter with silicone cell.