Unless you are a technician who can ADJUST the shutter speeds of your cameras, I suggest merely verifying consistency of exposure by taking the camera thru a full range of shutter speeds and f/stop combination of 'equivalent exposure' and inspecting negatives for 'same density' results across the range, and if you find inconsistency then sending your camera to a technician.
There is a guy out of Romania that sells them (shutter speed testers) on a well known auction site. Don't be tempted, run away as fast as you can. I speak from experience.
The basic reason for asking about the tester was I did a test roll on a recent F2 Photomic with known good lens and did a shutter test running from 500@f8, 250@f11, 125@f16 and 60@f22. The frame with 125@f16 was more dense of the same subject/light than the others...nearly a full stop by visual inspection.
I agree, finding your shutter speeds are inaccurate is just a way to make yourself unhappy, unless you are able to adjust them and you know what margin of error from the marked speed is allowable and still within tolerance.It seems you have hard evidence of shutter not being sufficiently accurate thru all speeds. So it seems appropriate that you send the camera in to a technician who can address that issue, and let HIM deal with the shutter speed testing to get it right, unless you somehow have learned how to do the adjustment yourself.
I've seen his stuff on Ebay. What was the problem you had?
Extremely inconsistent. Gave me readings that sometimes appeared reasonable and other times absolutely impossible. This guy ran me up and down the garden path - try this, try that. This went on for months. It was obvious that either they don't work or I had a bad one. He was incredibly nasty as well. He finally agreed to a return, but I'm sure only because of the PayPal guarantee.
I've tried using photo diode sensors with PC sound cards and Audacity software as well as the smart phone app with an optical sensor that the app developer sells. Both solutions work pretty well for me at lower shutter speeds.
I just checked eBay and the absolute cheapest oscilloscope was >$600, more typically about $1800 or $3600! . . .
I just checked ebay, and new Chinese oscilloscopes were selling for a little over $200, and used quality scopes for much less. Using an oscilloscope as a shutter speed tester does require interpretation of the results, unlike some shutter testers that provide a numerical readout which may not be accurate.
Extremely inconsistent. Gave me readings that sometimes appeared reasonable and other times absolutely impossible. This guy ran me up and down the garden path - try this, try that. This went on for months. It was obvious that either they don't work or I had a bad one. He was incredibly nasty as well. He finally agreed to a return, but I'm sure only because of the PayPal guarantee.
Mine was with the light source. He had me trying everything imaginable including 1000w lamps.The guy says that problems normally arised from the kind and alignment of the lamp and so now he sells a lamp bundled with the device.
Was your version the version without lamp or with the bundled lamp?
I am considering his device although I am also tempted by some kind of economical oscilloscope.
Go with the oscilloscope.
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