Yes Joseph I use Mamiya C330F TLRs as well as Canon FD 35 mm equipment., one the things I find most useful about the L-358 is that it will tell you what percentage of the exposure is daylight and how much is flash that is very useful for balancing mixed lighting situations so you can either adjust the flash output or move it further away to achieve the right balance between the two. If you look on You tube at Sekonic- 358 there's loads of videos showing you what the meter can do.Do you use medium format, Ben?
Joseph
Yes Joseph I use Mamiya C330F TLRs as well as Canon FD 35 mm equipment., one the things I find most useful about the L-358 is that it will tell you what percentage of the exposure is daylight and how much is flash that is very useful for balancing mixed lighting situations so you can either adjust the flash output or move it further away to achieve the right balance between the two. If you look on You tube at Sekonic- 358 there's loads of videos showing you what the meter can do.
I chose the L-358 in preference to the L-758 DR because although the latter has a built in spot meter there is no facility to take a general reflected light reading, a function I would miss, I preferred to buy the add on spot meter attachment which also works out marginally cheaper to get the pair if you are buying new.I really didn't know about this very useful function.
I followed your suggestion on you tube: very interesting.
My gear is a lot alike yours. Usually a MF 67 and Canon F1 new.
Thanks, Ben.
joseph
It must be uncommon because by doing this you aren't taking a reflected reading but a flat plane incidental reading which is the the way you meter flat copy , artwork, or evaluate contrast between light sources , I just compared this method with my L-358 with the Lumidisc reflected light attachment fitted, and the Lumisphere in the retracted mode with a Kodak 18% grey card, at 400 ISO the Lumidisc reading was 1/2 sec at f11.3, the retracted Lumisphere reads 1/2 sec at f 5.6.4 which is a hell of a discrepancy , I can't see how the L-758s incidental light reading with the dome retracted will be so different from the L-358s.benjiboy,
To make a general reflected reading with the L758/••••DR, extend the invercone, rotate the invercone head 180 degrees (back to front), meter and it's done e.g. camera in front of meter/line of sight, invercone facing subject. It is fairly uncommon to measure like this (most of my metering is multi-point incident or spot/multispot with pinhole).
Speaking personally the price wasn't the consideration but the suitability for the purpose I was going to use it for, and although a spot meter would be useful to me sometimes in outdoor situations most of my photography is portraits where Its no problem to approach the subject and take a reading, which is the way I'm used to working, in the year I've had the 1Degree spot attachment I've probably only used it about a dozen times.
I looked around reading performances of both meters,L-358 and L-758DR.
I think that for my needs the best choice is L-358. But if ones decides for the 1° degree wiewfinder too, price becomes quite the same.
So, do you mind to specify further your choice, Ben, Garyh...... and everyone else of course?
I'm thinking that it could be a certain asset a built-in spot. What do you think?
Joseph
Well, it's like this: I only mentioned the L758 because it is what I am using often in professional practice and the spot meter it used as frequently as incident; I would feel bereft of some essential 'tools' with something like the L358. Obviously I can't make a recommendation based on my use for others with dissimilar uses, but if they grow their skills and application the L758 will meet the challenge. For straight incident/reflected metering, the L358 is fine, just that. But measuring hi/lo image sections in contrasty light, a spot meter with multi averaging is the way to go. It all comes down to what you are doing now and what you will be doing in the future. How will you manage in that situation if/when it arises, especially in portraiture or outdoor/landscape?
Second hand meters of either model can be readily had in professional dealers and, aside from overall operational integrity, ensure you reset the meter to defaults lest you end up with dodgy exposures caused by some deep customisation (especially of note the L758).
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