halvmesyr
Established
My Minolta x700 seems to underexpose heavily when one particular lens is in use (the mc 100mm f2.5).
I'm using it in aperture priority-mode and from what I can remember the shutter speed displayed before pressing the shutter seemed reasonable. (Shooting mostly stopped down to at f8-f11)
Going back to slides from last summer I can clearly see that photos taken with my 45mm f2 lens are well exposed whereas the photos taken with the 100mm are very dark. Previously I thought that these issues were due to an issue with the shutter curtain that since has been fixed. But now it's quite apparent that it's the lens that has caused this.
I've inspected the lens and there is quite a lot of oil on the aperture blades. When unmounted and releasing the aperture lever it does not snap back instantly. It's not that dramatic but compared to my other lenses it lags a bit.
Could this behaviour possibly cause an under exposed image on the x700? From what I've read x700 meter takes a second reading when the lens has stopped down. But shouldn't a sticky aperture cause the lens to over-expose?
Thanks for any advice.
I'm using it in aperture priority-mode and from what I can remember the shutter speed displayed before pressing the shutter seemed reasonable. (Shooting mostly stopped down to at f8-f11)
Going back to slides from last summer I can clearly see that photos taken with my 45mm f2 lens are well exposed whereas the photos taken with the 100mm are very dark. Previously I thought that these issues were due to an issue with the shutter curtain that since has been fixed. But now it's quite apparent that it's the lens that has caused this.
I've inspected the lens and there is quite a lot of oil on the aperture blades. When unmounted and releasing the aperture lever it does not snap back instantly. It's not that dramatic but compared to my other lenses it lags a bit.
Could this behaviour possibly cause an under exposed image on the x700? From what I've read x700 meter takes a second reading when the lens has stopped down. But shouldn't a sticky aperture cause the lens to over-expose?
Thanks for any advice.