Doremus Scudder
Member
Doremus and others, per meters. Flare is easily controlled. You can put a rubber lens shade on a Pentax spotmeter just like a camera lens. It's an odd but available size, 40.5mm if I recall correctly.
Drew,
Lens hoods (even toilet-paper tubes attached to the meter that block everything outside the meter's field of view) don't seem to do the job for me.
With my Pentax digital spot meters, the reading area is just a small fraction of the entire field of view, so there's still a lot of light that can be bouncing around inside the meter that isn't being directed to the small circular area being metered.
I notice a difference metering shadow values when they are surrounded by much brighter objects. In the case of, say, reading under the eaves of a white clapboard building from a distance, I can get the shaded area to just fill the metering circle, but the glaring white walls are still there in the meter's field of view. I'll get a reading of X for that shadow from that distance with that much bright stuff in the field of view. Now, if I walk up closer so that the entire field of view of the meter is filled with the shaded area, I'll get a significantly lower reading; maybe one or two EV lower, than the first reading. The illumination of that shaded area hasn't changed any, so it has to be flare in the meter that's causing the discrepancy. When I have those situations and I can't walk closer and meter the shadow without bright things in the field of view, I'll figure that my shadow-value reading is high and add some exposure, usually just a guesstimate based on how bright and large the surrounding bright areas are.
Try the same experiment with your spot meters; I'll bet you see similar flare.
Best,
Doremus