Do you buy it or do you make it yourself? Can I use aluminum foil and packaging/electrical combo?
None of my cameras need it.
I have several stickers that I bought a long time ago. I doubt anyone sells them anymore, but that's just a guess. Anyway, I saw instructions on how to make your own -- somewhere -- but it should be easy using aluminum or copper tape -- just stick it to any reloadable cassette, and then cover up the sections with regular tape by looking at a cassette with the DX code you are interested in.
Do a SEARCH for DIY DX CASSETTES -- and let us know.
I recently purchased a couple of sheets of stickers for ISO 50 from eBay. So I can use SCALA 50 in a Yashica T4 Super that's been here since it was new many years ago. The Yashica defaults to ISO 100 when no DX code is present. Haven't exposed any film with them yet.
They still sell it on fleabay but it comes with lots of speed that is no use for me.
Good for ya
They still sell it on fleabay but it comes with lots of speed that is no use for me.
Good for ya
I have over 30 35mm cameras. None of them need DX code. Some of them can use DX code film but the ISO on all can be set manually. Only certain kind of cameras that would need the DX code to work correctly.
I was just given a Pentax P30T. Seems like a really nice SLR camera - but no manual ISO control, because it is dependent on DX coding and doesn't offer any exposure over-ride, other than memory lock. Pentax appears to have made and sold them between 1990 - 1997.
Exactly. And it has DoF preview.
Do you buy it or do you make it yourself? Can I use aluminum foil and packaging/electrical combo?
IIRC the MJU-1 only does full ISO steps, so 50, 100, 200, 400 etc. You'll probably be fine as it will most likely round 250 down to 200 but still something to keep in mind.I boughts them too, and also the 250 ISO version for my Kodak Vision 3 films when I use the Olympus Mju-1.
They are cheap, why should I build my own?
IIRC the MJU-1 only does full ISO steps, so 50, 100, 200, 400 etc. You'll probably be fine as it will most likely round 250 down to 200 but still something to keep in mind.
My method is also a knife to scrape off the paint and then set my own desired code using patches of electrical tape. I then insert the roll in my EOS camera for testing, without placing the leader on the takeup spool, and it will tell me the value of the DX code.
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