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Be careful. I tried to buy a Spotmeter F last year and after buying and returning six of them that were out of calibration, I gave up. The problem is that NO ONE will service the Spotmeter F anymore; they're an old meter with no parts available. Every one I saw was non-linear, meaning it was off by a different amount at different light levels, meaning that you cannot compensate for the inaccuracy the way you could if it was uniformly off by the same amount at all light levels. That's usually a sign that the metering cell is going bad. Back when Quality Light Metric was still in business, they had a good supply of parts for Minolta meters, but they had gone out of business before I began my search for a Spotmeter F.
I did look at KEH before posting my WTB but they didn't have a Spot Meter F. I'll keep my eye out.I have a Minolta Spotmeter F that works flawlessly. I purchased it used from KEH a couple years ago. It is my backup for my Pentax Digital Spotmeter. Sorry to hear about problems with purchases. Try KEH because they have a service department and can address any issues before and after a product sale.
I have a Minolta Spotmeter F that works flawlessly. I purchased it used from KEH a couple years ago. It is my backup for my Pentax Digital Spotmeter. Sorry to hear about problems with purchases. Try KEH because they have a service department and can address any issues before and after a product sale.
Spot F is an extremely reliable meter. Like everything it can be abused and eventually useless but it is NOT an old meter by film equipment standards.
Looks like you have had some bad experience with it. Yes, it's age is long in the tooth by now, but so are most meters that still work like the day they were made. I've had mine since early 90's, never an issue and they've been stored for extended periods in rather unaccommodating conditions. It's all about getting one that looks good, clean inside, optics clear, battery compartment with no signs of leaks, works as intended and good to go for many years to come. Given it's size, weight and reliable readings, this is still one of the best spots ever made.Minolta stopped making them nearly 20 years ago. Unfortunately, they are old and they are NOT repairable.
I'm not specifically looking for a super deal, but I tend to avoid overseas sellers - maybe not justifiably.There is a ton of these on ebay, not sure if you're looking for some super deal or just to get the right item. $200 is a good price these days, $150 would be close to a steal. Buying from Japan has not been an issue for me and that is majority of these offers come from. I'd get one if I didn't have 2 already.
japan you need to be a bit careful, but with that applied I always felt safe to buy.I'm not specifically looking for a super deal, but I tend to avoid overseas sellers - maybe not justifiably.
If it works it’s a great meter, just a monster by comparison. But hopefully you ordered one of newer generation that does NOT use combination 9v and mercury button cell batteries.
That is correct. I did not tell fully experience. Once I bought one with V badge, it was older style and likely a put-together version (at least managed to return it ).The Spotmeter V is the newer generation. The ones that used Mercury batteries were not called Spotmeter V. They were the 1/21 Spotmeter, the Spotmeter II, and the Spotmeter III. There was no Spotmeter IV for some reason.
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