I don't have many older SLRs as I tend to like using electronic SLRs from the 90s or newer. My Nikon F90X, Canon EOS3 etc are my favourite class of 35mm cameras.
On occasions I dust off a Nikon FG and a Nikon FE - both in great condition, visually mint, great mechanics etc etc.
My last two rolls with the FG and FE however produced extremely overexposed negatives. I was surprised, as I used film and developers I have standardised on, and I use the same film+dev combo with the F90X and EOS3 with spot on results every time.
I had never noticed dense negatives from the FG and FE before but interestingly I had mostly used them in Winter, with poor lighting, and never in full sun. This time, I was taking pictures in bright conditions and just shot away expecting good results.
The negatives are borderline unusable for my standards. I decided to make a quick check
-Same lens, tripod, swap lens between FE, FG and F90X - bright sunny day, measure bright walls, bright skies; exposure meter in the F90X set to centre-weighted.
-Repeat test against EOS3, set to centre weighted meter, and use a Canon EF prime lens of the same focal length as above. Same tripod.
-Compare FE and FG against 'sunny sixteen' guess in simple bright light frame, iso set to 250 (so expect 1/500 f/11). Same tripod position, same lens.
Results: Nikon F90X and EOS are in complete agreement with each other, and +/-1/3rd stop wrt sunny 16 guess (depending on scene, discrepancy ofc due to wrong guess on my side). FE overexposed by 1 and 1/3rd stop. FG overexposes by 2 stop.
I repeated the above test in an indoor setting. Same ISO setting. Overexposure error of the FE and FG reduces to 1/3rd stop.
So it would appear that the meters in these two cameras are not to be trusted anymore, which is a shame. What is even more worrying is that it seems they can kind of be trusted when the light is low, but become essentially useless with strong light?
My questions
- Has anyone else encountered this kind non linear metering error in these Nikon cameras?
- Any other checks you would recommend I should try to make sure I'm not wrongly interpreting what I'm seeing?
- How common is it in similar photodiode cell meters of the same age?
- Is it worth attempting to have them fixed?