Look, here's what I think is the thing with metering and slide film: if you use a camera that you know, with a meter that you know, and you know a thing or two about exposure, then it isn't that difficult to get a good exposure. The meter does not even have to be dead on, as long as it works and you know how it behaves.
When a camera is well designed and built, and has the features that one wants most problems come from mistakes made by the user. If your camera is good enough then any mistakes are made by you.
While there are a number of manual only cameras that have exposure compensation, none is really needed on a manual camera. The exposure compensation on these cameras are for compensation of focusing screen and not in the sense that we use on an automatic camera.
Necromancing this to ask again.
I have an FT in just lovely shape.
Everything works perfectly, but when the mirror lands on a small spring loaded cam on return, it does vibrate.
“Bounce” would be too strong a word, probably.
I’ve read conflicting info in various fora. Is it something I should have looked at? Is it just a missing piece of felt?
Wouldn’t want to slowly kill this lovely gem. On the other hand as an early consumer SLR, idiosyncrasies in the construction is to be expected.