I want to get a small hand held meter. Are they all selenium? Any new technology that would last?
I have gotten bunch of old meters with cameras i buy and none of them are reliable.
Should I just cough up the money for a Gossen Digisix 2 or digiflash 2?
That is what I did. I have a minolta SPot meter that is accurate and can be calibratedOld meters are a crapshoot. Virtually all Selenium meters are dead. CdS and Silicon Cell meters can be hit or miss. I have a Minolta Flash Meter II made in 1975 that is spot on accurate, but have seem a number of newer Flash Meter IV's that are no longer linear because the meter cells are dying. Your best bet it to buy a new meter, even if you don't like digital meters; they really are more reliable and more accurate than old meters.
Got a Gossen Digiflash2. Very happy. did not want to experiment.
I used Gossen Luna Pro SBC for years and it never let me down.
My L208 never let me down, only trick is to make sure the ISO settings did no slip when in my pocket, it's a bit too easy to change.
Battery last forever and is very common.
If I understand the <instructions>, apparently, you must hold down a button while the meter scrolls through all the ISO values, and then you release the button when it gets to the one you want? Is that right?What I like about the Gossen Digiflash is you can only change iso with holding a button twice.
If I understand the <instructions>, apparently, you must hold down a button while the meter scrolls through all the ISO values, and then you release the button when it gets to the one you want? Is that right?
I have quite a few meters, the worst are Weston Master V and Euromasters. I bought my Euromaster in the late 1970s. new, it died over 20 years ago.
My Gossen meters are all fine, my pre WWII AVO meter is accurate. I prefer my Lunasix 3 and F, and have an SBC, substitute Profi for Luna if in the US. My Spot meters are an ageing Pentax V, still accurate, a Capitol (Soligor) needs a new on/off switch, and a Minolta Spotmeter F, the most useful.
However, I always carry a Leningrad 4, as a back-up, I have 2 or 3. surprisingly accurate.
Ian
I have the Minolta Spotmeter F and I love it.I have quite a few meters, the worst are Weston Master V and Euromasters. I bought my Euromaster in the late 1970s. new, it died over 20 years ago.
My Gossen meters are all fine, my pre WWII AVO meter is accurate. I prefer my Lunasix 3 and F, and have an SBC, substitute Profi for Luna if in the US. My Spot meters are an ageing Pentax V, still accurate, a Capitol (Soligor) needs a new on/off switch, and a Minolta Spotmeter F, the most useful.
However, I always carry a Leningrad 4, as a back-up, I have 2 or 3. surprisingly accurate.
Ian
That brings back too many bad memories of me trying to set early models of digital alarm clocks and wrist watches. Invariably, I would hold the button a fraction of a second too long, miss the target setting, and have to scroll through the whole lot again. Not being able to scroll in both directions is a deal breaker for me. I can feel my blood pressure going up just thinking about it. ;-) Of course, YMMV.And yes, you have to scroll up all the way and then back to the beginning in order to adjust the ISO down.
That brings back too many bad memories of me trying to set early models of digital alarm clocks and wrist watches. Invariably, I would hold the button a fraction of a second too long, miss the target setting, and have to scroll through the whole lot again. Not being able to scroll in both directions is a deal breaker for me. I can feel my blood pressure going up just thinking about it. ;-) Of course, YMMV.
Got a Gossen Digiflash2. Very happy. did not want to experiment.
Mine eat batteries.
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