Alex Benjamin
Subscriber
I’m a scientist, so I’m in favour of precision. But you guys must be incredibly quick getting your hands or dodging tools into place if you are measuring fractions of a stop with a timer. Or maybe you have a foot switch. Myself, if I have to dodge or burn, I use a metronome. It isn’t terribly, but to the eye the result is repeatable. And I use seconds rather than f-stops. I guess I’m just a heretic.
Actually, for short times, you work with an f-stop timer exactly as you would with any other method: you stop down the lens one or two stops and double or triple the time. With longer times, fractions of a second becomes irrelevant. What is practical with the F-stop method is that if you do stop down, the calculations are made for you, i.e., 1/3 or 3/4 stop is 1/3 or 2/3 stop no matter if your lens is at f/5.6, f/8 or f/11. It's just the time that's longer; the proportions are the same. It's not better, it's just simpler, quicker and more precise.
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