tedwin
Established
Hello
Have had a good look around and can't find what I'm after, hoping someone here can help.
According to the Cameraquest site the VCII covers around 30degs. I assume I can use just inside the 50mm framelines to give me an idea of what it's seeing?
With reflective meters I like to know the pattern or area they cover. If anyone knows the pattern / weighting / approx frameline coverage of the VCII it would be great to know.
Thanks in advance.
Ted.
Have had a good look around and can't find what I'm after, hoping someone here can help.
According to the Cameraquest site the VCII covers around 30degs. I assume I can use just inside the 50mm framelines to give me an idea of what it's seeing?
With reflective meters I like to know the pattern or area they cover. If anyone knows the pattern / weighting / approx frameline coverage of the VCII it would be great to know.
Thanks in advance.
Ted.
Stu W
Well-known
I had the VCII and from what I recall the meter approximated the area covered by a 90mm lens. Stu
ferider
Veteran
Like Stu said, Ted.
Paul T.
Veteran
I believe the same as Stu. I might have read that in the manual. Or hallucinated it.
payasam
a.k.a. Mukul Dube
Stu is right. This meter has no pattern or weighting.
Roger Hicks
Veteran
Dear Ted,
No real weighting -- very slight centre bias, perhaps -- and close enough to 90mm, as others have said. Or 75mm with rather more centre weighting...
Cheers,
R.
No real weighting -- very slight centre bias, perhaps -- and close enough to 90mm, as others have said. Or 75mm with rather more centre weighting...
Cheers,
R.
mmikaoj
eyemazer
Do you people use it to measure the light from a scene? Like point it in the same direction your shooting? I allways measure from the inside of my hand, held in shadow. Am I missing something?
Roger Hicks
Veteran
When in doubt, point it towards the darker part of the scene for negatives. Reading off your hand is effectively taking an incident light reading, the light incident on a subject of constant reflectivity: ideal for transparency,
Cheers,
R.
Cheers,
R.
Last edited:
charjohncarter
Veteran
Roger, those are two great sentences: the ultimate mini course on metering.
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