akptc
Shoot first, think later
My new (barely used) M7 arrived earlier today and I quickly shot two rolls through it looking for problems. Shot a roll of Kodak BW400 and a roll of Superia 100. What I found was:
1. The M7 is a dream to handle, easily the most fun camera I’ve ever held. This I expected.
2. The M7 overexposes in AE mode. This one was a shock. In situations where my R-D1 or even the Hexar RF would expose right on the money, the M7 tends to overexpose by ~2 stops, I am guestimating. Panicking, I searched the net for answers and found this. Apparently the M7 meter indeed does (or at least some <earlier?> ones did) tend to overexpose. Quote from that site:
" ... I also found the M7 overexposes a little (as do other meter Ms I have used), which helps. […]
I can confirm this. In a typical 36exp roll, I would lose about five shots due AE misbehavior (a thirteen percent failure rate)."
I also compared the meter readings from the M7 and the R-D1 indoors and outdoors, and the M7 will nearly always indicate longer exposure.
So I wonder – is this truly a universal “thing” with all M7s and one should just learn to compensate for it or would I be better off having the meter checked out?
The 3 pics attached are the overexposed shots and the pic of my “new baby” 🙂
Thanks in advance for your feedback.
1. The M7 is a dream to handle, easily the most fun camera I’ve ever held. This I expected.
2. The M7 overexposes in AE mode. This one was a shock. In situations where my R-D1 or even the Hexar RF would expose right on the money, the M7 tends to overexpose by ~2 stops, I am guestimating. Panicking, I searched the net for answers and found this. Apparently the M7 meter indeed does (or at least some <earlier?> ones did) tend to overexpose. Quote from that site:
" ... I also found the M7 overexposes a little (as do other meter Ms I have used), which helps. […]
I can confirm this. In a typical 36exp roll, I would lose about five shots due AE misbehavior (a thirteen percent failure rate)."
I also compared the meter readings from the M7 and the R-D1 indoors and outdoors, and the M7 will nearly always indicate longer exposure.
So I wonder – is this truly a universal “thing” with all M7s and one should just learn to compensate for it or would I be better off having the meter checked out?
The 3 pics attached are the overexposed shots and the pic of my “new baby” 🙂
Thanks in advance for your feedback.
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