Is there a film camera that can be programed so it knows what the reciprocity law failure is for the particular film loaded?
after a bit of night work experience, you could reduce the wastage of film by bracketing less.
With DX coding, sure, it should be possible. But since reciprocity usually isn't an issue except for fairly long exposures, it'd be of limited interest.
Heck, I am still looking for a filter that improved the composition just prior to the shutter releasing!
Steve
Is there a film camera that can be programed so it knows what the reciprocity law failure is for the particular film loaded?
Not all camera's have DX coding none of my 15 or so 35mm camera's has it
Ian
I'm looking for a camera that doesn't need a photographer and makes 1st class shots.Heck, I am still looking for a filter that improved the composition just prior to the shutter releasing!
Steve
I sincerely hope this never happens, It's bad enough when your employer makes you redundant, but even worse if your cameras do it to you.Is there a film camera that can be programed so it knows what the reciprocity law failure is for the particular film loaded?
You'd need more than DX encoding for this. The camera would need to know the exact film, and those are modified in ways that change reciprocity characteristics periodically, so a preprogrammed compensation feature would go out of date. For color it would need to dial in filtration, and that would also change with improved emulsions. You could have the camera prompt the user for a Schwarzschild exponent, but that would confuse 99.99% of the market, and even those that know what that means may not know it offhand for the particular film they have loaded.
Lee
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |