Thanks, Chris. Glad to give you some positive distraction.
may i ask how you metered for the tough scenes? Would the meter in MP even work at very low light condition? Do you think a handheld meter would be necessary at this condtion?
Thanks.
If possible, I measure the light on my subject directly, using the integrated MP meter. I always aim for the head, if it's a human or other animal ;-). I do this while adjusting focus on the eyes. If this part of the subject is in bright sunlight I may or may not decide to compensate, depending on the effect I want to get.
In (very) low light I admit that it is more tricky, but still possible without going handheld --I then take a general measurement of the palm of my hands, twisting it up and down a bit to change the incident angle and see how this influences the reading. You really have to get to know your meter.
[I have a very good Lunasix handheld meter, but hardly ever use it since I got into rangefinders about a year and a half ago. I used to be a Canon SLR shooter, and then often relied on the Lunasix. Not sure why, I am under the impression that the Leica meter is more consistent/straight-forward.]
One thing to keep in mind (and you most probably already know) is that the area measured by the built-in meter is dependent on the focal length. It's a certain percentage of your image center. Thus if I ever get a 75mm, it will function less as a general and more as a spot meter. Then again, your image is narrowed down as well (though not the image you see through an RF-viewfinder!). Nothing new, but still important to take into account.