FishyFish
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My Olympus OM-1 has a 1.5v alkaline battery powering the light meter. As the original battery was a 1.35v mercury cell, the new battery gives an off-reading on the light meter (from my tests it appears to under-expose in comparison with my digital camera or light meter apps).
Other than buying a custom battery, a convertor, a retro-fit, or just winging it and taking shots when the meter's needle says they will be overexposed by a certain ammount, is there a formula for compensating for the discrepancy? My quick tests seem to indicate a difference of about 2 stops (a test gave 1/8sec exposure at f/2.8 on my digital camera at ISO 125, but the OM-1 was showing 1/30sec with the same settings). Does this sound about right?
I'm wondering if, for example, rating 400ASA film down to 100ASA on the camera speed-dial will be a quick fix to compensate for the battery?
Your advice is welcomed oh wise ones of Talk Film & Conventional.
Other than buying a custom battery, a convertor, a retro-fit, or just winging it and taking shots when the meter's needle says they will be overexposed by a certain ammount, is there a formula for compensating for the discrepancy? My quick tests seem to indicate a difference of about 2 stops (a test gave 1/8sec exposure at f/2.8 on my digital camera at ISO 125, but the OM-1 was showing 1/30sec with the same settings). Does this sound about right?
I'm wondering if, for example, rating 400ASA film down to 100ASA on the camera speed-dial will be a quick fix to compensate for the battery?
Your advice is welcomed oh wise ones of Talk Film & Conventional.
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