Mark Layne
Subscriber
I trust that beer is Moosehead?
Mark
Don
Remember the rocket launching site planned for Cape Breton. It now occurs to me that might be why they wanted to borrow my Davis and Sandford
Mark
I trust that beer is Moosehead?
Mark
Don
Remember the rocket launching site planned for Cape Breton. It now occurs to me that might be why they wanted to borrow my Davis and Sandford
Mark
No matter what or how: it didn't move.I think its a testing flaw! The penny is turned the wrong way. It needs to have the flat side to the front of the camera. Positioned as shown the movement would be to rotate the coin. Not push it sideways.
In some cameras the mirror coming to rest at the top triggers the shutter to fire.
A lot of cameras go through the firing sequence with the end of each operation triggering the next operation.
e.g. Pressing shutter starts the mirror going up and closes down aperture. Mirror up starts first shutter curtain travel. End of second shutter curtain travel releases mirror and opens aperure.
I found this out with my ETRS when I replaced the mirror up damping foam The first bit I used was a bit too thick and the mirror did not go up far enough to trip the shutter.
Steve.
Try making some enlargements of Moon or night time stars with Mirror slap. I've NEVER had good ones with mirror slap.
If the engineer gods at Hasselblad didn't want us to use mirror lock up, they wouldn't have provided the button.
Likewise, they are equipped with not one, but two tripod screws.
The flower was photographed using the set up in the B&W shot. Mostly I used MLU, but can't say whether it was used on this particular shot or not.
Any time exposure requires a mirror lock up. We are talking about typical uses.
This thread is aimed at the whiners who complain about mirror bounce at 1/500 second.
Uhm, my OM1 doesn't pass the test (at least how I did it). I put a 20cent coin between the lens cap and the fron of the lens. And it fell. Maybe I pressed the shutter button too hard, speed was 1/60
Now It passed the test.Try with the timer.
If that fails, then simply glue the coin to the camera and be happy.
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