Steve_F
Well-known
I had exactly the same decision - M4-P or M6 classic.
Ignoring my Nikon DSLR's, I've spent a lot of time with my Nikon FM3A using the built in meter as a guide, but setting everything manually and for that reason opted for an M6 classic. When it came to it I saw a 'Mint' boxed M6 TTL and bought that as it was just within budget. I'd let a couple of 'classics' slip through, fannying about on decisions and deposits.
Just got my first roll of slide film back and all the exposures are spot on. I love the 'two arrow and dot' meter in the M6.
All my practice is paying of as I'm finding nearly every shot I'm getting to within half-a-stop with my initial 'guess-timate' and then correcting accordingly.
RAW / DNG files had begun to make me lazy!
Steve.
Ignoring my Nikon DSLR's, I've spent a lot of time with my Nikon FM3A using the built in meter as a guide, but setting everything manually and for that reason opted for an M6 classic. When it came to it I saw a 'Mint' boxed M6 TTL and bought that as it was just within budget. I'd let a couple of 'classics' slip through, fannying about on decisions and deposits.
Just got my first roll of slide film back and all the exposures are spot on. I love the 'two arrow and dot' meter in the M6.
All my practice is paying of as I'm finding nearly every shot I'm getting to within half-a-stop with my initial 'guess-timate' and then correcting accordingly.
RAW / DNG files had begun to make me lazy!
Steve.