Christopher Walrath
Member
I knew my original thread would come back out again. So . . .
Here it is a nutshell. EV11 is f5.6 @ 1/60th second (and all corresponding combinations). NO MATTER WHAT. For an on-camera meter, you set the ISO on the camera body. For a hand held meter you set ISO on the meter. The meter reading takes this into account and gives you the appropriate EV. Now where EV11 would be right for, say, ISO100, EV12 would be right for ISO200, EV13 for ISO400 and so on, but EV13 is EV13 (f2.8@1/1000 - f4@1/500 - f5.6@1/250 - f/8@1/125 - f/11@1/60 - f/16@1/30 - f/22@1-15). Exposure Value numbers are for a specific set of exposure combinations. Differing film speeds require different sets of EV's. But the EV itself is constant.
ISO only comes into play when also using Additive Light Values.
But that is another story.
Here it is a nutshell. EV11 is f5.6 @ 1/60th second (and all corresponding combinations). NO MATTER WHAT. For an on-camera meter, you set the ISO on the camera body. For a hand held meter you set ISO on the meter. The meter reading takes this into account and gives you the appropriate EV. Now where EV11 would be right for, say, ISO100, EV12 would be right for ISO200, EV13 for ISO400 and so on, but EV13 is EV13 (f2.8@1/1000 - f4@1/500 - f5.6@1/250 - f/8@1/125 - f/11@1/60 - f/16@1/30 - f/22@1-15). Exposure Value numbers are for a specific set of exposure combinations. Differing film speeds require different sets of EV's. But the EV itself is constant.
ISO only comes into play when also using Additive Light Values.
But that is another story.