Nimbus62
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PART 1
It was the early 1970s, and 35mm camera manufacturers were introducing electronic focal-plane shutter control, particularly to enable automatic aperture priority, simplify the speed control mechanism and simplify adjustment.
(Example: Minolta XM, XE-1, Leica R3, Cannon F1, Minolta XD, XG, XM, ...).
Then, in the late 1970s and early 1980s, they switched from analog shutter control to digital shutter control (and more) Example: Canon AE-1, Nikon F3, X500, X700.
The heart of the shutter control stage is therefore to manage the exposure time, time between the start of the 1st curtain and the 2nd curtain, nothing more.
The way the exposure duration is managed is very similar in analog or digital.
Fig 1 - Shutter control vs Digital. 1/60s.
The way it is implemented is very different.
Analog design: we use a Ramp signal to create a delayed signal
Digital: we use a Counter to count the time unit and create delayed signal
It was the early 1970s, and 35mm camera manufacturers were introducing electronic focal-plane shutter control, particularly to enable automatic aperture priority, simplify the speed control mechanism and simplify adjustment.
(Example: Minolta XM, XE-1, Leica R3, Cannon F1, Minolta XD, XG, XM, ...).
Then, in the late 1970s and early 1980s, they switched from analog shutter control to digital shutter control (and more) Example: Canon AE-1, Nikon F3, X500, X700.
The heart of the shutter control stage is therefore to manage the exposure time, time between the start of the 1st curtain and the 2nd curtain, nothing more.
The way the exposure duration is managed is very similar in analog or digital.
Fig 1 - Shutter control vs Digital. 1/60s.
The way it is implemented is very different.
Analog design: we use a Ramp signal to create a delayed signal
Digital: we use a Counter to count the time unit and create delayed signal
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