bmac said:
Don,
I'm doing normal development (Sandy's times) with +1 stop of exposure. Using an incident meter. The negatives dont look over developed or over exposed to my untrained eye.
Basing exposures on incident readings without adjustment will in some conditions result in underexposure, just as it would when using a gray card, unless compensation is made. The problem, as described by Davis, is as follows:
"... although the meter's dome is designed to transmit 18% of the incident light, the normal pointer of the meter's calculating dial is fixed at the midpont of the normal 7-stop range. In other words, the meter cell assumes that the world is bathed in a 5-top range of uniform, shadowless light, but the calculating dial assumes that the cell's readings relates to the real world whre shade and shadows are every present and where 7 stops is the norm."
What to do when determing landscape exposures for B&W negatives by incident reading? Quick and dirty answers below.
1. Base your exposure on an incident reading in the shadows, but double the EFS (effective film speed).
2. Base you exposures on a highlight incident reading, but halve your EFS.
3. Base your exposure on an average of shadow and highlight incident reading, using normal EFS.
Sandy King