If you go back a page the affected neg is in there. Some are the same half exposure, some frames are fully captured.
The camera is an OM 20 as previously mentioned. One thing I didn't ask was, when the mode is set to auto and you have the shutter speed displayed in the VF, I assume you do not need to change the shutter speed on the ring unless you're in manual?
Your assumption is correct. In auto mode, changing that setting on the ring does nothing.
One further thing to understand though - the OM-20 employs off the film plane metering when in auto mode. There are actually two metering systems in the camera. The first feeds the information display in the viewfinder, while the second actually measures the amount of light that reaches the film (and reflects back). In auto mode, the first is just informing the photographer, while the second actually controls the shutter.
This doesn't have much to do with your capping problem, except that if you are releasing the shutter in auto mode, and don't have any film in the camera, the shutter will stay open longer, because the pressure plate reflects less light than film. That might confuse you as you "exercise" your camera.
The Olympus OM-20 is a great little camera - small, light, accurate and a great body to have if you have OM lenses. It complements well an OM 1, 2, 3 or 4. I would spend money on mine if the shutter started capping, and I have at least three other, "higher end" OM bodies.