Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2002/04/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]After getting back the first roll of (Provia 100 F), I conclude that it is hard to get a bad exposure with the M7. But it can be done. There are obviously some situations where I am going to revert to manual mode, where I don't want the camera to keep changing the exposure. I am thinking that in low light situations I will use manual, so it is not fooled by having a light source too near the center meter zone. The low light sensitivity seems much better than with my M6 classic. Flash was a real surprise. I jumped from a M6 classic to the M7, and really did not understand the benefit of TTL. I put the SF20 into TTL mode and fired away, changing the aperture at will. Then I thought I screwed up, since I didn't stop to change the f/stop on the SF20 to match the lens aperture. The pictures were perfect anyway. A little research disclosed that the f/stop setting on the SF20 only is for giving you a correct readout of distance. If you don't care about that, forget about it and shoot. The ISO setting is automatically transferred to the SF20. NEW FEATURE: Here is one you have to dig in the manual to find. When using flash, the speed readout will blink if the aperture selected will lead to incorrect exposure. Example: You have turned on the SF20 to TTL, and the M7 is on AUTO. The speed will be automatically set to 1/50, the number 50 will show in the viewfinder, and the ISO will be transferred to the SF20. If the selected aperture on the lens (say f/2 with the 1/50) would lead to an overexposure given the ambient light, the number 50 in the viewfinder will blink, and you can stop down the lens to stop the blinking (say to f/5.6). I am still experimenting here, but I think the first point the "50" stops blinking is the right ambient light exposure. Then you can go, say 1 to 1 1/2 stops more to lower the ambient exposure versus the flash, or stay at the ambient exposure and use the exposure compensation on the SF20 to lower the flash 1 2/3 stops for fill flash. ANNOYING FLASHING DOT: Well, there had to be something that I don't like. There is a dot that flashes in the lower left of the number display under the following conditions: If the DX info on the film doesn't match the ISO setting. Ex: You set 1200 for an 800 film If the film can doesn't have a DX code, e.g., IR film. If you dial in exposure compensation If there is no film in the camera If the ISO setting dial is not set correctly If anyone know how to turn this off, please tell me. A steady dot is sufficient for reminding you that the ISO is set differently from the DX rating or that you are using exposure compensation. Blinking is annoying. The blinking should be reserved for no film, or incorrect settings. It seems that you have to use the DX rating or you get the blinking dot. Taping over the code just makes it think that it is a no code can, and it blinks. Does anyone know where to get DX code strips? That might be the solution. I sometimes want to push a whole roll, and I suppose I could tape on a new DX code, thereby avoiding the blinker. - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html