miikkakos
Member
Hello all.
Being long time lurker here at rff, this will be my first post to this forum.
I have acquired a pretty beaten M2 from evilbay. It has been working pretty flawlessly for the first two months I have had it. I still mainly shoot digital (M43), so I haven't gone through that many rolls with the M2 (as it is pretty pricey to shoot film). Now as we have had our first real cold weathers here in Finland, I have had some problems with my first cold weather roll. So this is my seventh roll with M2 and it is TRI-X pushed to 1600. Self developed. This is my second time trying to push TRI-X to 1600.
So, to my problem. The negative has many frames as not exposed almost not at all. And some are half exposed as in my attachment. Some pictures are as they should.
Have you people seen anything similar happening with M2? These shots were taken in about -25c temperatures. Any ideas of what has happened? If I remember correctly, these were taken using high shutter speeds (1/500 or 1/1000), which I don't usually got to use.
Sorry for the worst phone images of negatives, and even crappier partial landscape.
Being long time lurker here at rff, this will be my first post to this forum.
I have acquired a pretty beaten M2 from evilbay. It has been working pretty flawlessly for the first two months I have had it. I still mainly shoot digital (M43), so I haven't gone through that many rolls with the M2 (as it is pretty pricey to shoot film). Now as we have had our first real cold weathers here in Finland, I have had some problems with my first cold weather roll. So this is my seventh roll with M2 and it is TRI-X pushed to 1600. Self developed. This is my second time trying to push TRI-X to 1600.
So, to my problem. The negative has many frames as not exposed almost not at all. And some are half exposed as in my attachment. Some pictures are as they should.
Have you people seen anything similar happening with M2? These shots were taken in about -25c temperatures. Any ideas of what has happened? If I remember correctly, these were taken using high shutter speeds (1/500 or 1/1000), which I don't usually got to use.
Sorry for the worst phone images of negatives, and even crappier partial landscape.