eumenius
Member
Dear friends,
sometimes it's not all this bad to spend time in hospital - I've got a Metz 45CT-5 set along with Quantum battery (dead cells inside, err) as a warming-up gift. It works fine, and it includes a Mecamat sensor - a true German device with a built-in finder. I can understand something about its controls - one side of it makes for manual mode, using fractions of full power (up to 1/64), showing the f/numbers and distances for a given film speed. Well, the another side is the automatic mode - with a film speed setting ring too, the view angle switch and the green/red switch. This side gives me programmed auto exposure... but what should mean those red and green side triangle marks placed non-symmetrically around the BIG red and green lines indicating the chosen auto-f/stop program? Can't understand it by myself, sorry... but these are there for some important reason, right?
Am I right about the other features, or am I missing something?
Also, is that Mecamat thing a good gadget by itself, eh? Does anyone use them today? Should it offer a better light control precision, being compared to inner flash sensor of the Metz 45CT-5 itself? Do those old Metz 45 flashes without Mecamat measure their flash power well enough to shoot chromes without a TTL, or their built-in flash meter is a rather so-so performer? Should I test the flash and Mecamat first on a full range of programs with my Minolta and some medium-gray subject before shooting?
Cheers from Moscow,
Zhenya
sometimes it's not all this bad to spend time in hospital - I've got a Metz 45CT-5 set along with Quantum battery (dead cells inside, err) as a warming-up gift. It works fine, and it includes a Mecamat sensor - a true German device with a built-in finder. I can understand something about its controls - one side of it makes for manual mode, using fractions of full power (up to 1/64), showing the f/numbers and distances for a given film speed. Well, the another side is the automatic mode - with a film speed setting ring too, the view angle switch and the green/red switch. This side gives me programmed auto exposure... but what should mean those red and green side triangle marks placed non-symmetrically around the BIG red and green lines indicating the chosen auto-f/stop program? Can't understand it by myself, sorry... but these are there for some important reason, right?

Also, is that Mecamat thing a good gadget by itself, eh? Does anyone use them today? Should it offer a better light control precision, being compared to inner flash sensor of the Metz 45CT-5 itself? Do those old Metz 45 flashes without Mecamat measure their flash power well enough to shoot chromes without a TTL, or their built-in flash meter is a rather so-so performer? Should I test the flash and Mecamat first on a full range of programs with my Minolta and some medium-gray subject before shooting?

Cheers from Moscow,
Zhenya