M
Magus
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That argument doesn't fly..nobbylon said:.... And before anyone starts on about not needing it, if photographers didn't want meters Leica and others would have left them out...
There are a couple of issues, and the man asked 'M4 or M6?' Between the two, the clear answer is 'M4'.
How about that all the framelines are the wrong size.
With respect, that in no way counters the argument that photographers want built-in meters (which is the argument that you claim doesn't fly).If built-in meters were great, why would Nikon (and the same holds for Canon and anyone else for that matter) have upped the number of measuring matrix elements to a staggering 1005 over the years?
Answer: to compensate for the fact that built-in meters measure reflectance, and not light.
The only true reason for a built-in meter is convenience.
I merely wanted to point out that there are two ways to use a meter, and that built-in meters lure you into going into one of these two modes..nobbylon said:Peter,
not quite sure what point you are making.
Polarizers and ND-grads are an SLR's forte I guess. But even then, the recommended procedure for using ND-grads is to measure the darkest part without a filter first.richard_l said:The M6 may be more practical for some who use polarizers or contrast filters, since metering through the filter makes it unnecessary to compensate manually for the filter factor.
Richard
ErikFive said:If you want a built in meter on your camera go with the M6. I didnt like that I had to take my eye of the viewfinder to check the meter.
If you have a problem with the finder just buy a SHADE from Leicagoodies:
http://www.leicagoodies.com/ 13$ incl shipping or uppgrade to the MP finder.
Edit: I dont have the built in meter in my head as some here has![]()