I am re-reading this text in the light of what I have learned so far during the thread.
"
This defines the minimum exposure which can yield a quality print. When the contrast parameters of the ISO standard are maintained, this point falls approximately one stop to the left of the exposure for the fixed density speed point (Hm where the density equals 0.10 over Fb+f)."
Do you mean: ... falls approximately one
third of one stop to the left ...
If the density is 0.1 over fog, one stop to the left of that is inside the fog.
"
Sometime in the 70s or early 80s the speed equation changed from 8/HR to 10/HR thus increasing the speed of reversal film by 1/3 stop. The way the speed point was determined didn’t change, just the speed constant"
I don't get that. If the speed is increased, I endup with a different box speed on the package. The same material that previously was rated ASA 100 is after the change rated ASA 125. That change made, all the rest should remain equal. The new H
g should naturally be 1/3 of EV closer than the old EV for the same material.
"
It’s all about the relationship between the speed point and Hg. In this example, we know where HR was determined and we know where Hg should fall. At one time this was the same point with reversal color film, but it was decided to reduce the overall exposure. Now Hg falls 1/3 stop below HR.
The exposure meter wants to place the exposure at Hg. This relationship can be determined with the equations Hg/Hm for B&W film and Hg/HR for reversal color film. For B&W this value is 10. For color reversal it’s 0.8. In the previous incarnation it was 1 which means the speed point for reversal color film was the same point as where the exposure wanted to place Hg. The equation can also use the speed constants and the value for Eg"
We come to the meet here.
Case 1
Do you mean a lightmeter gives me an H
g which would have been the not just the "exposure point" but also the "speed point" with the old rating. But given that there is a new rating of film speed, I can't use the exposure value from the light meter "as is" (we call this H
g) but I should apply a correction factor, which is 0.8? But then, why is the slide film not rated with an ASA value that allows me to use, "as is" the exposure value given by the instrument? Am I really supposed to read ISO 100 and expose a slide film as ISO 125 because I am supposed to know that the speed equation was changed? (I don't think that is the case).
Case 2
Or is it the other way round? The speed point was raised 1/3 EV
but not the ASA speed rating. Only raising the speed point, without changing the speed equation, would produce an exposure of 1/3 EV closer than with the previous rating. BUT, compensatively, the speed equation is changed from 8/H
R to 10/H
R. That implies there is now a compensative factor 0.8 in order to make the exposure fall where it used to fall, and the ISO speed remains the same even if the speed point is defined differently.
The "speed point" for slide film doesn't coincide anymore with the "exposure point" (no problem with that. That also happens in negative film, where the speed point lies at a distance relative to exposure point). But the "exposure point", thanks to the 0.8 correction factor, falls again where the light meter wants to place it, at H
g.
In this case we have this situation:
The light meter gives the "exposure point", or H
g, which is valid for both slide film and negative film, at ISO rating.
Knowing that, I still don't understand why I should need to care at all about the existence of a speed point somewhere, and of speed equation.
All that I need to know is what my ISO speed is and that the light meter will give me mid-tone, i.e. H
g.
When using slide film, I know that I have let's say 2.3 useable texture above mid-tone (the exact amount depends on the slide film, and on where I cut "useable").
When using negative film I know that I have let's say 4.3 useable texture below mid-tone when using standard development (the exact amount depends on the negative film, and on where I cut "useable").
Is Case 1 you mean, or Case 2? Or case 3?