Hi folks,
I'm a real noob with metering, so be gentle!
I'm facing the following issue:
When i take a meter reading with the Sinar Booster 1 / Minolta Flash Meter IV, if i get an F number of 5.6-0, all is hunky-dory, i just read the shutter time and I'm ready to rumba.
But sometimes i get an F number like 5.7-7. (the third number is showing a multiplier of 0.1 of a stop).
Ok, i dive into the Minolta manual and it tells me i need to adjust my lighting until the reading is 5.6-0
Well that's no good, maybe i don't want to do that, perhaps i'm working with natural light or lots of other lights and i don't want to adjust them all.
So then i need to adjust my shutter time instead. But strangely, the Minolta won't let me do this adjustment (dial the F number back to 5.6, then it shows me the corrected shutter time). I'm guessing this is because back in the day, it was expected that you would stick to one of a certain number of discrete shutter times, there were no in between shutter times considered?
But this is 2023 baby, i think we can be more flexible about this!
So to my questions:
Is what i wrote above correct, or am i completely misunderstanding something?
Am i being silly about this, should i just adjust my lighing so my middle grey reading will be 5.6 and deal with it?
Is there an online converter available somewhere. I mean one where you tell it an F# and shutter time, then if you change the F#, it tells you the new shutter time?
Alternatively, if someone knows the equation, i can hack the converter together myself in Excel?
If i understand correctly, the F number of 5.6-9 is extremely close to F8?
I should also mention i'm using long shutter times, 2 seconds+, i appreciate that at fast shutter time you need to stick to the standard times.
Thanks in advance!
I'm a real noob with metering, so be gentle!
I'm facing the following issue:
When i take a meter reading with the Sinar Booster 1 / Minolta Flash Meter IV, if i get an F number of 5.6-0, all is hunky-dory, i just read the shutter time and I'm ready to rumba.
But sometimes i get an F number like 5.7-7. (the third number is showing a multiplier of 0.1 of a stop).
Ok, i dive into the Minolta manual and it tells me i need to adjust my lighting until the reading is 5.6-0
Well that's no good, maybe i don't want to do that, perhaps i'm working with natural light or lots of other lights and i don't want to adjust them all.
So then i need to adjust my shutter time instead. But strangely, the Minolta won't let me do this adjustment (dial the F number back to 5.6, then it shows me the corrected shutter time). I'm guessing this is because back in the day, it was expected that you would stick to one of a certain number of discrete shutter times, there were no in between shutter times considered?
But this is 2023 baby, i think we can be more flexible about this!
So to my questions:
Is what i wrote above correct, or am i completely misunderstanding something?
Am i being silly about this, should i just adjust my lighing so my middle grey reading will be 5.6 and deal with it?
Is there an online converter available somewhere. I mean one where you tell it an F# and shutter time, then if you change the F#, it tells you the new shutter time?
Alternatively, if someone knows the equation, i can hack the converter together myself in Excel?
If i understand correctly, the F number of 5.6-9 is extremely close to F8?
I should also mention i'm using long shutter times, 2 seconds+, i appreciate that at fast shutter time you need to stick to the standard times.
Thanks in advance!