hi geostog
I use a Pentax me super..
doesn't have contax lenses but works pretty well..
it has exp comp, is tiny they don't cost much when you get them used.
price is out of my range
Centre weighted, spot or matrix will offer different readings, even with compensation applied. If you're fussy about exposure, manual or spot metering are the most reliable methods. Generally speaking, film compacts did not prioritise user overrides except by ASA setting, my Olympus XA3 for example. The few that did will probably have 20+ year old electronics of uncertain reliability.The metering isn't my problem. It's just that I could do it faster by using the auto metering and a compensation dial. Is my scene balanced? auto exposure will do fine. Do I have my subject in shade or in bright light? auto metering will probably mess it up and I'll have to take things at hand. Of course I can watch the metering and over/under expose of what is suggested by the camera but I find it way faster to just have it in auto and just turn a dial to balance the metering.
OM1n is a joy to use and fully manual and mechanical. Forget exposure compensation dial. Just get one that has been CLA'd including removal of nasty deteriorating prism foam.For the last few years I've been using my OM-10 as my main 35mm camera. I mainly used it in manual mode and occasionally in auto. The exposure compensation dial is useless, too much of a trouble to turn it so I never used it.
Lately I've put my Canon Eos-10 in use. I'm not loving it (too big and heavy for me) but I quite enjoyed the hold exposure button which sped up the whole process.
Now I'm on the hunt for a replacement for my OM-10. I'm considering an OM-2(n) as I can use the lenses I already have (50mm and 135mm) and I really love the OM series aesthetics and size. I've briefly owned an OM-2n before but I barely took any photos with it but I guess the separate exposure compensation dial would be of great use.
Would there be any other camera that would fit my needs? I'd be willing to change systems as I only have two lenses and I'm not planning on using more than these (heck, even one the 50mm as I mainly use this focal length).
The metering isn't my problem. It's just that I could do it faster by using the auto metering and a compensation dial. Is my scene balanced? auto exposure will do fine. Do I have my subject in shade or in bright light? auto metering will probably mess it up and I'll have to take things at hand. Of course I can watch the metering and over/under expose of what is suggested by the camera but I find it way faster to just have it in auto and just turn a dial to balance the metering.
Any camera with a viewfinder meter will do the job. Centre the needle, green light, or whatever system the camera uses to indicate correct exposure, then click however many stops of over or under exposure you prefer. Of course this means there must be a manual exposure mode.
@Les Sarile OM3/4 are out of my budget, but I'd love to get one. I have set my eye on the OM2 spot, it seems that I would like it and fit my needs. But the OM2 Spot doesn't seem to get much love from the community, why is that so? Is it because it has the program mode? It doesn't suffer from prism deterioration, it goes up to 3200 ISO, it has a cool looking black body, it has led indications in the viewfinder and most importantly it has spot metering. It seems that the OM2n is getting all the attention and love.
OM2sp has a high incidence of battery drain issues. That is why it has limited appeal. You may still be lucky though and get a good one, or hold out for an OM2n that has been properly CLA'd and has no foam. One that has been serviced by John Hermanson would fit the bill.@John Bragg I'm a big fan of the OM line. However, I've had bad experience with the deteriorated foam. Bought two OM2n cameras, none of them were described to suffer from it, returned the first and tried to replace the prism from an OM10 on the second. I succeeded but broke a ribbon cable along the way, sold it as parts later (still functional but had no metering). Luckily now ebay sellers are mentioning this way more often but it's really hard to find one with clean prism (are there any at all at this age?) or one that has been serviced. Buying one and getting it CLA'd would be way too expensive for me sadly. Otherwise I'd go for one of them in a heartbeat.
@Les Sarile OM3/4 are out of my budget, but I'd love to get one. I have set my eye on the OM2 spot, it seems that I would like it and fit my needs. But the OM2 Spot doesn't seem to get much love from the community, why is that so? Is it because it has the program mode? It doesn't suffer from prism deterioration, it goes up to 3200 ISO, it has a cool looking black body, it has led indications in the viewfinder and most importantly it has spot metering. It seems that the OM2n is getting all the attention and love.
@cjbecker I do this with my EOS-10 and I loved it! I have it in aperture priority, point it at the part of the image (roughly) I want to be properly exposed and then hold the exposure lock button, then frame and take the picture. But the camera is big and bulky and I'm looking for an alternative to it. i understand that not many film cameras have AE lock button and that's why I'd compromise with the exposure compensation instead.
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