I thought that a new meter should always work better than an old one.
There is no real standard that light meters are calibrated to manufacturers get to choose their own.
Does it really matter? Even with a meter the brain must be engaged for judgement. Minuscule differences of a 1/3 or 1/2 stop is only significant in cinematography or commercial still pictures Nader controlled lighting conditions. Since both meters give good results can you really see any difference? My Gossen Luna pro f, Weston ranger 9, Gossen pilot and sekonic twinmate all give similar but not exact readings. I just made these comparisons because just bought and checked out a newly purchased Nikon dp-1 meter. It was also within the range of reasonableness. The meter is just one of a whole chain of numerical values which may not be exactly what the numbers indicate and only practice can reveal.
What is important is a combination of consistency with at least reasonable accuracy.Well, that's the reason why I got them. Specially for zone system testing. If meters are 1/3 or 1/2 stop away, then it's impossible to get an exact zone V. But if many people find readings to be just a little bit off between models, then that seems to be the best we can get. This is a science, but not an exact science.
Develop to the best of your ability to the ASA gradient. Then read all the targets with a densitometer. Graph the results and look for the point that falls closest to the density corresponding to "ten times the speed point".
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