Change the ISO to compensate. In short last time I brought a camera in for repair with the light meter ring squeaky and off by 2/3 stop they claimed it was fried and they had a lovely $200 camera body for me to try out.
that's an underexposure of 1 entire stop. how are you measuring this? you would change the ISO to 200 because that gives the film twice as much light. When I did mine I just adjusted the meter until I got optimal density on my negs.
The camera body itself, the bottom cover and battery cover, serve as one of the cantacts in the circuitry of the K1000. If there is any corrosion on the bottom or the battery cover, it will cause incorrect readings
that's an underexposure of 1 entire stop. how are you measuring this? .
I just pick up another K1000 and found that the light meter is not correct. Is there an adjustment under the bottom cover for the meter or is the meter no good?
Thanks!
I would try to compare them with a known good lightmeter. You have two identical cameras and you are assuming that your original one is correct and the new one is off by one stop. It could be the other way round.
Steve.
How much would i compensate? The correct reading should be f4 125th iso400 but the second k1000 with incorrect meter is showing f4 250th iso400.
Update on the meter. After the cover and bottom plate was cleaned of all corrosion the meter is either 2 stops over or 2 stops under, it does what it wants to and its very slow to react when i change the shutter speed. When i used it in a brighter situation the meter is correct! My other k1000 meter is exact in dim or bright light. Did Pentax use different meters in the same model through out the years? The k1000 with the meter that is good in dim or bright situations has a serial #79xxxxx and the k1000 with the meter that goes nuts in dim situations has a serial #68xxxxx. The meter works great in bright situations.
Meters can be non-linear. There are as I recall both high and low light adjustments on the circuit board.
Several things can happen. Electronic components will age, the cell can age, the adjustment pots can become dirty or tarnished, a solder joint can become "cold" or even the wiring can be corroded. As in from the battery.
If I had the camera apart on my bench, the first thing I would do is clean the pots and the ISO resistor. second, touch up the solder joints related to the meter, third, suspect the wire or cell. When frustrated I'd consider drop-kicking the thing down the street. They're quite rugged, you know.
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