I just got one of these (actually the slightly modified version for GAF, the L-CM) day before yesterday, and it's already the first m42 camera I've really really liked. It's more usable than my Prakticas, more polished and comfortable than my old Yashica that broke, and it has a level of convenience that obviously you don't get on a Zenit E, plus it can use lenses that the Zenit can't. I'm especially looking forward to trying some daylight flash fill on this the way I do on my Nikkormat, since it syncs at a very usable 1/125th.
But there's something weird about one of it's more helpful features. See, it has normal plus-minus exposure brackets and a needle like on a Pentax or a Nikkormat. It resembles a Nikkormat FT viewfinder closely, more so than a Spotmatic But then it has a special triangular warning flag that rotates out directly behind the needle. The manual says that this comes out at speeds so slow that the meter cannot accurately meter for the film speed. The flag appears to be geared directly to the film speed dial inside the shutter speed dial so that it rotates out progressively as a certain speed is reached on the shutter speed dial. The flag appears at about 1/8 when the film speed is set to 1600 (technically in the black space past 800) and so on.
This all makes sense and is well and good. Nice to see a feature like that. BUT, there's more to it than that. As you continue to go down past the speed at which the flag rotates into the viewfinder, the meter needle is mechanically raised first to the center of the flag and then to the upper edge. There is no sensitivity to light at this point, and the merer doesn't have to be on for this to happen. It is as if the entire galvanometer was being rotated.
What is this meant to indicate? Just a little signal to the photographer that they're going the wrong way if they're trying to leave the "red zone?" An indicator of how many stops you are past the edge of effective sensitivity?
But there's something weird about one of it's more helpful features. See, it has normal plus-minus exposure brackets and a needle like on a Pentax or a Nikkormat. It resembles a Nikkormat FT viewfinder closely, more so than a Spotmatic But then it has a special triangular warning flag that rotates out directly behind the needle. The manual says that this comes out at speeds so slow that the meter cannot accurately meter for the film speed. The flag appears to be geared directly to the film speed dial inside the shutter speed dial so that it rotates out progressively as a certain speed is reached on the shutter speed dial. The flag appears at about 1/8 when the film speed is set to 1600 (technically in the black space past 800) and so on.
This all makes sense and is well and good. Nice to see a feature like that. BUT, there's more to it than that. As you continue to go down past the speed at which the flag rotates into the viewfinder, the meter needle is mechanically raised first to the center of the flag and then to the upper edge. There is no sensitivity to light at this point, and the merer doesn't have to be on for this to happen. It is as if the entire galvanometer was being rotated.
What is this meant to indicate? Just a little signal to the photographer that they're going the wrong way if they're trying to leave the "red zone?" An indicator of how many stops you are past the edge of effective sensitivity?