I have the AE Finder FN, which according to most people "unlocks" the ability to use aperture priority AE on the Canon New F-1. This is the official Canon line from the manual, this is what various reviews tell me and it seems to be well-known. (If you look on Camera-wiki dot org, the wording is non-commital, and that's because I wrote it. I revamp the article on nearly every SLR I get, make it look professional and add more information.)
However, with the camera set to "A" and the finder removed completely, and my hand shielding the focusing screen, the camera appears to behave in aperture priority mode--not perhaps perfectly (lord knows I wouldn't waste film to test this), but the length of the exposure definitely depends on both the light and the aperture setting. So it seems like the capability is in the body, not the finder.
I have not had any of the non-AE finders for this camera, only the AE-F-FN. Is aperture priority locked out when they're installed? Or does it still work, just without the AE F FN's built-in shutter-speed indicator in the viewfinder?
Obviously you would not want to use it with a waist-level finder as stray light would get in!
However, with the camera set to "A" and the finder removed completely, and my hand shielding the focusing screen, the camera appears to behave in aperture priority mode--not perhaps perfectly (lord knows I wouldn't waste film to test this), but the length of the exposure definitely depends on both the light and the aperture setting. So it seems like the capability is in the body, not the finder.
I have not had any of the non-AE finders for this camera, only the AE-F-FN. Is aperture priority locked out when they're installed? Or does it still work, just without the AE F FN's built-in shutter-speed indicator in the viewfinder?
Obviously you would not want to use it with a waist-level finder as stray light would get in!