Bill, first off, thanks for the info on the Pentax-L lens. I'm not all that familiar with RF lore. As I said, I'm not a collector, I've just acquired a lot of cameras ... that's my story and I'm sticking to it
🙂
bmattock said:
Gene,
I hate to keep bugging you, but now I'm really curious! I've been shying away from 'modern' SLRs for a number of reasons:
1) I'm color-blind - so colored blinky LEDS don't TELL me anything.
2) I'm not an autofocus (or auto-anything) kind of guy.
3) I have trouble focusing through modern non-pentaprism SLRs, especially with the newer slower zooms.
So, if I'm understanding you correctly, I can have what is essentially a digital SLR version of a Bessa R! That is, TTL metering (in stop-down mode, no biggie), wide-open focus (fast super-taks, yea!), and all I need is a digital Rebel and this $50 adapter?
Sounds pretty good to me! Tell me, how is the exposure information displayed? Is it stupid LEDS that turn color to mean something, or actual printed information for us color-blind people? How's the viewfinder with your fast Super Taks? Do you find yourself shooting more with the standard Canon EOS lens, or with your M42's?
I find this all very fascinating - thanks for your patience!
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks
Good questions. I don't know if I have all the answers but I'll take a stab at it.
The readouts in the viewfinder of the DReb are bright green against black. No colour changes -- straight info. Take a peek through one next time you're in a camera shop to see if you can read the info okay.
In Av mode, you see shutter speed, aperture, and a +/- 2 stop exposure compensation scale in 1/3 f-stops. In M mode you see shutter speed, aperture and exposure scale -- same scale as the compensation scale in Av mode.
When using adapted lenses, the aperture does not display, but the shutter speed does. I think to myself things like '3-clicks on the lens, I'm at f/4' or whatever. The onboard meter works well with the adapted lenses.
The pentaprism viewfinder on the DR is smaller than a traditional SLR and there are NO focusing aids such as microgrid or split-image. And the image is not as bright as an older film SLR. I can usually focus okay with my manual lenses by focusing in and out, narrowing down the focus, then fine-tuning by eye. I get it wrong sometimes. One other note: I wear glasses and there is a diopter dial on the cam that lets me match my glasses well. That's important because you need to see as clearly as possible to focus accurately.
The rest depends partly on the ambient lighting and the speed of the lens. Wide angles are more difficult to focus this way but often you can just preset them. I've had really good luck using my Zuiko 50mm f/3.5 macro lens on the DR, and macros require precision focusing.
So, with these cautions, the DR works well for me, most of the time, with adapted lenses. I would prefer a brighter focusing screen with a microgrid or RF, but apparently with all the AF lenses for these units, it'll never happen.
Gene