onre
Member
And then there's DIN, which stands for DAS IST NORM or possibly Deutsches Institut für Normung.
No. It was the testing methodology of B&W film that changed, not the meters. The same meter needs to be able to represent B&W negative, color negative, and color reversal film. From C.N. Nelson's Safety Factors in Camera Exposure, "There are no plans for reducing the safety factor by means of a change in the calibration formula or exposure meters because there are too many meters in existence with the present calibration and because the meters are also used for color film for which no change in exposure level or film rating is required or desired."
The early Weston's calculators were calibrated in 'Weston's' and are 1/3 stop away from ASA (and ISO). All II and earlier some III maybe!
Yes they changed the testing but also removed a stop of safety factor.
HP3 in your camera magically changed from 200 ASA to 400, if you thought that was a good idea...
You say magic. I say scientifically reevaluate.
You say magic. I say scientifically reevaluate.
The early Weston's calculators were calibrated in 'Weston's' and are 1/3 stop away from ASA (and ISO). All II and earlier some III maybe!
Yes they changed the testing but also removed a stop of safety factor.
HP3 in your camera magically changed from 200 ASA to 400, if you thought that was a good idea...
You say magic. I say scientifically reevaluate.
Removing a safety factor to ensure more negatives would be underexposed seems like magic to me, YMMV.
Rather than under exposed, more like the sensitivity range was expanded and developers were changed to help effect it.
Sensitivity range was expanded.
The early Weston's calculators were calibrated in 'Weston's' and are 1/3 stop away from ASA (and ISO). All II and earlier some III maybe!
Yes they changed the testing but also removed a stop of safety factor.
HP3 in your camera magically changed from 200 ASA to 400, if you thought that was a good idea...
Why don't you guys read Hanson (revised edition) or Haist?!
It reminds me of people debating brain surgery!
PE
This got me to thinking... it's not that Weston film speeds are 1/3 stop away from ASA... even Wikipedia explains in footnote 21, Weston speeds are measured well up on the curve... They do not directly relate to ASA speeds and never did because of the significant difference between the speed determining methods.
But if you want to use the calculator dial on a meter calibrated in Weston film speeds, with ASA film speed numbers... you will get the f/stops and shutter speeds for the Candlepower indicated on the needle (assuming the Candlepower reading is correct)... if you take 1/3 stop (or 2/3 stop on my sample Weston Master II - there must be different variations) off the ASA numbers.
Good, because that is what was done.
With the new sensitizations, the same emulsion could gain 1 - 2 stops. If you do that, you can extend the range or you can keep the range and improve sharpness using acutance dyes. If you extend the range, then grain goes down and you move all 3 parameters up the speed, grain and sharpness ladder. This is virtually impossible to do without control of the emulsion itself. In other words, a process change does not move all 3 except under very special circumstances. So, there is no magic bullet.
PE
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