I have to say, I am feeling very inclined to go with the MC-36; as I know I can pick one up from the photostore down town.
I can't thank you enough, for all the hunting, and for the links![]()
Buy the cheap one...I did....off Ebay and they're great. I've got the Canon equivalent and confirm you can programme in hours, minutes and seconds in bulb mode to suit.
It even beeps quietly every second when holding the button manually so you can count the seconds.
I have an MC-36 myself.
You could just do multiple exposures, 4 x 30s and then stack them in your processing app of choice, or in camera (though I'm not sure if you can do 4). If you don't want to be around, use the built in intervalometer to take 4 exposures with a 0 second gap between them.
True!
However, I tend to try and bracket my shots to get the "best fit". So, the +/- 10" will mean that my bracketing is of no use since they may all end-up being the same duration :bang:
Of course, it would be great if I could get the shot wonderful without bracketing :shrug:, but that's not so easy.
Does the LCD not count up the bulb exposure, my 20D has that feature. For getting the right exposure just whack up the iso to your max, use the camera's meter to meter for the exposure take a test shot to see how it turns out then just calculate the exposure from that by counting the stops.
example:
iso3200 4sec @f8 gives you a good exposure then you just gotta count down the stops to iso100
iso1600 = 8sec
iso800 = 16sec
iso400 = 32sec
iso200 = 65sec
iso100 = 130sec
That's what I've always done with very long exposures (done up to 12min for IR shots). Being terribly accurate with long exposures inst necessary as stated going +/- 10 sec would have little effect on the exposure at those lengths.