Is it possible to make a clockwork light meter? If so, would I be the only person who may use one?
Is it possible to make a clockwork light meter? If so, would I be the only person who may use one?
How on Earth would such a thing work? The old meters used Selenium cells which turned light into an electrical signal which then registers on the meter. I don't see where winding it up would come into it.
You wind up the clockwork. The clockwork train turns a tiny regulated generator which supplies 2.7 volts to your LunaPro. That's about as close as you can come to a clockwork lightmeter.![]()
There could also be a gear train which, when you line a pointer up to the needle, turns the exposure calculator to show the setting.
I imagine some kind of Steampunk-looking gizmo with lots of brass gears and stuff. Sort of like an Argus C3 on steroids.
Maybe something like this:
http://lh3.ggpht.com/abramsv/SAbnnw2ppxI/AAAAAAAAOog/A3AIV4qGNs8/s1600-h/steampunk6.jpg
As I pointed out above, clockwork cannot by it's nature measure light. The wind up radios use the machanism I described above, or have no clockwork and the user turns the generator directly by a small crank. The actual radio is no different from any other radio deriving it's power from a chemical battery, photovoltaic battery, or mains voltage.We have wind up radios, as endorsed by Nelson Mandela, so why not a wind up light meter?
But can you mount it on the hot shoe of your camera?
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