It means he wants you to go up to medium format. Be careful, this would be the beginning of GAS, which has no end.
GAS? My brain must have stopped working haha

It means he wants you to go up to medium format. Be careful, this would be the beginning of GAS, which has no end.

GAS? My brain must have stopped working haha![]()
Gear Acquiring Syndrome

). I suggest you hang on to it and look after it; it's a recognised collector's item, along with others of that epoch e.g. the 620, 750, 850, 600/630 and RT (the RT was the last before the EOS 1 came along).The 650 is still using evaluative metering when in manual mode ("metered manual"). The only time it is not using any meter is in Bulb.
You will grow out of it, for sure (anybody with GAS grows out of things...). I suggest you hang on to it and look after it; it's a recognised collector's item, along with others of that epoch e.g. the 620, 750, 850, 600/630 and RT (the RT was the last before the EOS 1 came along).
Can I not just ignore the metering and adjust the shutter/aperture, using a spot meter?The 650 is still using evaluative metering when in manual mode ("metered manual"). The only time it is not using any meter is in Bulb.
Love the print over the scan. Did you add any adjustments to the scan or is that a raw scan?
Can I not just ignore the metering and adjust the shutter/aperture, using a spot meter?
I'm going to run with both hands..
A spot meter!? That was quick. GAS already?? :confused:
OK...well, if you have the basics of spot metering sorted you can do a parallel comparison of your (spot metered) aggregate reading vs the camera. A comparison may or may not be useful, and may or may not show a similarity, but there is no harm in trying and there will quite possibly be something to learn. I recall a parallel test of my spot metering vs the smart-arsed 16 zone evaluative system of the EOS 1N! I metered the scene as I normally do, just above the camera. Then the meter of the 1N was activated. Surprise, surprise, the readings matched: the camera was reading the same parts of the scene (an evening sunlit sandstone rock outcrop on an open beach with a tinted sky behind, green vegetation on the hillside on my left and light reflecting off the sand — all areas I spot metered individually). Note for that experiment both the EOS 1N and Sekonic L758D were set to 0.3 steps). Subsequent tests showed quite large variations, indicating how the evaluative system weights some areas incorrectly in challenging light situations where a spot meter would be more explicit.

Agree with the sekonic recommendation but if you're spending that kind of money, go with the 1V ... 45 point auto focus![]()
Can I not just ignore the metering and adjust the shutter/aperture, using a spot meter?
I'm going to run with both hands..
You missed something. You're handing control and decision-making of metering the scene to the camera. (also, the central-bias 45pt focus is not where I actually focus, but where the camera wishes me to focus!).The Sekonic gives the user — me, you...others, absolute control over what is metered and how. The 1V is undeniably good, certainly, but I can do much better armed with a spot meter in lighting conditions which have been known to throw off even the 1V (and 1N). But not for my work and the precision and detail of MF.

dude
do this simple thing
for a whole roll of film
put your iso on the iso stated on the film box
when you take your photographs
bracket your exposures ... take one as the meter says, then one 1 full stop above then 1 a full stop below what the meter says
( meter says f 11 do f 11, f 8 and f 16 ) for a full roll
process the film normally as you would .
then look at the resulted negatives
scan them and lnvert them and see which ones look best to you
then expose another roll of film 1 stop over or under or box speed ( what ever the "test" tells you to do )
and see what they look like.
calibrate your in camera exposures the way you like them ( personal box speed ) and do this little test for ever film
you want to shoot. you don't need another meter, just use what is in your camera and save your money for film.
have fun !
john
I'm gonna start this test today ...then expose another roll of film 1 stop over or under or box speed ( what ever the "test" tells you to do )
and see what they look like.
Pretty much, except 64 is one stop over as you will be giving it more light and 250 will be one stop under as it is a higher speed, therefore gets less light. FP4 is a great film. Are you processing it yourself at home? If so consider developing in Rodinal (sold these days as Adonal and Maco R09). This film and developer are a good match.Sorry to bug,
I just want to make sure I get this right.
So the film I'm currently using while I learn is ISO125. A stop under would be 64 and a stop above would be 250? A full stop is literally double (+/-) the box speed?
Cheers
Jay
Sorry to bug,
I just want to make sure I get this right.
So the film I'm currently using while I learn is ISO125. A stop under would be 64 and a stop above would be 250? A full stop is literally double (+/-) the box speed?
Cheers
Jay


Oh dear, of course *slaps head* that's what I meant! I must sound like a right t**t! Excuse my incompetence, I got a bit excited about learning new stuff and forgot my basic facts!Pretty much, except 64 is one stop over as you will be giving it more light and 250 will be one stop under as it is a higher speed, therefore gets less light. FP4 is a great film. Are you processing it yourself at home? If so consider developing in Rodinal (sold these days as Adonal and Maco R09). This film and developer are a good match.

I only have AF lenses :/ so I'll just note it on my display on camera and adjust the f/stop electronically.notice what the fstop is on your lens ring
and just click it over to the next number.

Yup. This much I do knowand to confuse you a bit more
changing the shutter speed +/- one speed will do the same thing
but a refresher never hurt anybody! 
DD-X is also a very good developer. I think you will find the Ilford stop and fix to be fine as well. Wetting agent is necessary. If you don't soak the film in it at the end but just hang it to dry straight out of the wash, you are likely to get drying marks, which are basically water spots on the film. These will show up when you scan or wet print and are annoying. It can also be good to do that final soak in distilled or demineralised water - you might be able to buy this cheaply from a supermarket. When you say you have a litre of wetting agent does that mean you bought it pre-mixed? Generally it comes in concentrated form and you add a few drops to the water you are giving the final soak in. The best brand that I have found is LFN - I put a few drops in the final soak water and never get water spots. If it isn't pre-mixed with water one liter of concentrated wetting agent will probably last you a lifetime.Oh dear, of course *slaps head* that's what I meant! I must sound like a right t**t! Excuse my incompetence, I got a bit excited about learning new stuff and forgot my basic facts!
Yes, I develop at home (I've only shot & developed 1 roll so far). I bought DD-X as that was what the Ilford guidelines said is best (of course they would, to sell more products). I will give Rodinal a try next. Thanks for the tip, Michael
I also use Ilfostop, Ilford Rapid Fixer and wetting agent. Are there any better alternatives? Also, I've seen not everyone uses wetting agent, is it necessary? I have a litre of it now and may as well continue until I finish it, but if it's not essential/beneficial, I won't buy any more.
Thanks
Jay
When you say you have a litre of wetting agent does that mean you bought it pre-mixed? If it isn't pre-mixed with water one liter of concentrated wetting agent will probably last you a lifetime.
I bought them all as a bundle when I got my film developer stuff. At least I'll never need to buy wetting agent again 
I never knew it had to be a deskilled water :/ Everywhere I've seen/read uses tap water?Yes, jay, you're doing it exactly right: the diluted wetting agent should be the last thing that touches the film, after a thorough washing with filtered, distilled, or deionized water.
As for jnanian's bracketing suggestion, I'd recommend doing that by varying the shutter speed instead of the aperture, since varying aperture affects depth of field.

I never knew it had to be a deskilled water :/ Everywhere I've seen/read uses tap water?
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