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- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!swrinde!emory!news-feed-2.peachnet.edu!umn.edu!msc.edu!ns!news
- From: amolitor@network.com (Andrew Molitor)
- Subject: rec.photo FAQ and answers
- Message-ID: <1994Mar17.065955.16869@ns.network.com>
- Followup-To: rec.photo
- Summary: Some of the questions asked frequently in rec.photo, and their
- answers. Or at least, a good try at them.
- Originator: amolitor@blefscu
- Sender: news@ns.network.com
- Nntp-Posting-Host: blefscu
- Organization: Network Systems
- Date: Thu, 17 Mar 94 06:59:55 GMT
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Lines: 638
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu rec.photo:44031 news.answers:16502 rec.answers:4484
-
-
- Archive-name: rec-photo/faq
- Version: 1.0, 3/1/94
-
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- >>>> Contents
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Some rec.photo generalities
- Other photo informational sheets, and mailing lists
- A short lexicon of terms
- Some useful phone numbers
- Some miscellaneous questions
- Equipment - brands, purchasing and quality
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- >>>> Some rec.photo generalities
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Kodak Publications
-
- These are recommended so often that the fact of their existence
- is worthy of a spot here. Kodak publishes a large set of pamphlets
- on various subjects photographic, from how to dispose of darkroom
- chemistry to how to take pictures of monitors and TV screens.
- Some are free, the rest are cheap. All may be obtained from
- 1-800-242-2424, easily. The catalogue of publications is designated
- L-1, and may be obtained free.
-
- How to ask a question in rec.photo
-
- This may seem silly, but a surprising percentage of questions
- asked in this newsgroup are ill-phrased. In an effort to help
- this problem go away, I suggest:
-
- 1) specify make and model of equipment
- 2) specify exact film type (read it off the box!)
- 3) specify exact camera settings
- 4) be as detailed as possible about the circumstances and
- failure mode/problem.
-
- Try to get the terminology right -- look it up if you're not sure!
- In short, provide as much detail as possible.
-
- Is it OK to flame in rec.photo?
-
- No ;) We don't flame in this newsgroup. Really! This is one of
- the very few unmoderated newsgroups with almost no flame content.
-
- Hey! Let's split rec.photo up in to several groups!
-
- Periodically, people suggest that rec.photo get split up.
- The consensus generally arrived at is 'no', and the reasons given
- are many. The big ones seem to be: Too many different ways to
- split the group, everyone would have to read all the groups anyways,
- there'd be a *lot* of crossposting, and the group doesn't get that
- much traffic anyways.
-
- If you're feeling snowed under, poke around your site, and figure
- out how to use kill files, if you have them, to filter out articles
- on subjects you're not interested in.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- >>>> Other photo informational sheets, and mailing lists
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- These are posted to rec.photo by the indicated people (when
- I know 'em -- please let me know of any mistakes or missing info). This
- should not be taken as license to mail these people for copies! Please
- wait a while for a copy to be posted before trying other routes.
-
-
- - Nikon FAQ sheet (monthly posting) --
- (tredysvr!ubbpc!kjm@gvls1.gvl.unisys.com)
- - Camera Feature List(s) -- glporter@zeus.calpoly.edu (Glen Porter)
- - Mail-order house review list -- blondin@rockies.ATT.COM (BlondinDJ)
- - The "Photographic Lenses FAQ" and the "Photographic Lenses Tutorial"
- (monthly postings, available for ftp on rtfm.mit.edu in
- /pub/usenet-by-group/rec.photo)
- -- jacobson@cello.hpl.hp.com (David Jacobson)
- - The EOS FAQ posted occasionally, and available for FTP on
- moink.nmsu.edu (128.123.1.46) -- rma@clockwise.att.com
- (Bob Atkins)
-
-
- These are the photographic mailing lists I know of:
-
- There is a LISTSERV mailing list for Minolta cameras. Send mail
- to LISTSERV@TECHNO.ISC.RIT.EDU with a subject line of
- SUBSCRIBE MINOLTA to join.
-
- Brian Reid runs a mailing list of people who use Leicas and other
- rangefinder cameras. If you'd like to be on it, send mail to:
- leica-users-request@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us
- or
- decwrl!mejac!leica-users-request, if you can't do "@" addressing.
-
-
- Medium Format Digest. Moderated. Rather variable frequency, a
- a digest once a week, or more. Send mail to hamish@netcom.com,
- to subscribe, or submit items.
-
-
- Mailing list for Bronica S, EC, and EC/TL users. This list
- is dedicated to these models since many of the parts are
- interchangeable. The purpose is to create a forum that is the
- most likely place to get answers to your questions about these
- cameras. Subscribe by sending a note to:
-
- bronysaur-request@post.royalroads.ca
-
-
- There is a mailing list for a variety of topics surrounding
- stereo photography, handled by a list server at LBL. To
- subscribe, send a message to listserv@csg.lbl.gov with
- 'subscribe photo-3d <your name>' in the text (NOT the subject
- line!) of the message. Contact bercov@csg.lbl.gov for more
- help or information.
-
- Photo-CD information is distributed via the photo CD mailing
- list.
-
- Those who wish to subscribe
- to it should send mail to the following address:
-
- listserv@info.kodak.com
-
- with the command
-
- SUBSCRIBE PHOTO-CD <first-name> <last-name>
-
- on a line by itself in the body (and no other text). Substitute
- your first name and last name where indicated; these will be used
- to identify you when you submit a message to the list. Your
- electronic mail address will be derived from this subscription
- request message.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- >>>> A short lexicon of terms
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- f-stop
- The ratio of focal length to aperture diameter (actually,
- 'entrance pupil' diameter, which is not quite the same).
- Any two lenses set at the same f-stop will allow the same
- amount of light to pass through them (aside from minor
- differences in light losses in the lens). Smaller numbers
- mean more light.
-
- ISO/ASA, Film speed
- The rated speed of the film, as determined by a published
- and somewhat technical standard. Higher numbers indicate
- that the film in question requires less exposure. Some films
- seem to perform better when used at speeds different from the
- manufacturer recommendation, however.
-
- EI, Exposure index
- The film speed at which the photographer chooses to shoot
- the film. Often the same as the ISO/ASA of the film.
-
- EV, Exposure Value
- A measure of total exposure given the film. 1 sec at f/1.0
- is EV 0, as is any other equivalent f-stop/shutter speed
- combination (2 sec at f/1.4, 4 sec at f/2.0). EV 1 is one stop
- *less* exposure (e.g. 1 sec at f/1.4), EV -1 is one
- stop more, and so on.
-
- GN, guide number
- Power rating for flash. Given a film speed (An EI, in
- fact), to compute the correct f-stop for exposure,
- divide the GN by the subject distance. NOTE: this implies
- that you need the correct units for subject distance, both
- feet and meters are commonly used. GN's for a flash
- are usually given as 'GN 140 in meters at ISO 100'.
-
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- >>>> Some useful phone numbers
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- [I've only tried some of these, and would especially welcome any
- additions and/or corrections! - Andrew]
-
- 800 number phone # directory system: 1-800-555-1212
-
- Canon:
- 800-828-4040
- NY 516-488-6700 (east coast)
- CA 714-769-6000 (west coast)
- Victor Hasselblad, Inc.
- 201-227-7320
- Minolta Consumer Relations
- CA 714-895-6633 x101 Douglas Dodge or Bill Suarez
- NJ 201-825-4000
- Minox:
- 516-437-7837
- Nikon:
- 800-NIKON-US, 800-645-6687 (general info/customer support)
- 800-645-6635 (new product information)
- 213-516-7124 (parts depot)
- Olympus:
- NY 516-364-3000
- NJ 800-221-3000 dealer listings, manuals, literature
- Europe: Germany (++49) -40-23773-0
- Fax: -649
- Sigma:
- 516-585-1144
- Tokina:
- 310-537-9380
- Tamron:
- 516-484-8880
- Tamrac ( camera carrying supplies ):
- 800-662-0717
- Vivitar:
- 800-352-7481
-
- Yashica (Contax/Kyocera as well?):
- 201-560-0060 (USA main office)
- 908-560-0060 (apparently works as well?)
- 312-250-0591 (midwest USA office)
- 818-247-2140 (western USA office)
- 416-671-4300 (Kyocera Canada)
- (040)25 15 07 0 (Yashica Kyocera Germany)
- (01)720 34 34 (Yashica Switzerland)
- 283-4244 (Yashica do Brasil Industria e Comercio Ltda.)
- (03)797-4631 (Yashica Japan)
- Calumet:
- 800-CALUMET
- Kodak Information:
- 800-242-2424
- 800-465-6325 (In Canada)
- Ilford Information:
- 800-535-9205
- Ilford technical support:
- 201-265-6000
- Pentax:
- 303-799-8000
- Fuji Customer Service:
- East Coast: 800-279-4419 (??)
- West Coast: 800-326-0800 ext. 4223
- Polaroid Customer Service:
- 800-225-1618 (technical literature?)
- 800-343-5000 (also customer service?)
- Light Impressions (dealer in archival products)
- 800-828-6216
- University Products (dealer in archival products)
- 800-336-4847
- Photographers' Formulary
- 800-922-5255
- 406-754-2896 (Fax)
- Lightworks (source of photographic chemistry)
- 800-776-9678
- Bostick & Sullivan (platinum printing and other exotic chemistry)
- 818-785-4130
- A Photographer's Place (excellent source of photographic books)
- 133 Mercer St.
- P.O. Box 274, Prince St. Station, New York, NY 10012-0005
- 212-431-9358 or 212-966-2356 (one or the other is current)
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- >>>> Some miscellaneous questions
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Will airport X-ray machines damage my film?
-
- Reports vary. Some machines will, others won't. High speed
- film (ISO 1000, up) is certainly at risk. Ask for a hand search,
- but you may not get one. Lead bags may help. Don't worry
- overmuch about ordinary film.
-
- Is Kodalux the same as Kodak?
-
- Nope. Kodalux is the name of a chain of labs, some or all of which
- were previously owned by Kodak. Kodak sold these labs to Qualex,
- which owns and operates the Kodalux labs. To make things more
- interesting, Kodak does own a large share of Qualex, but does not
- control it. There has been some suggestion that the Kodalux name
- applies to only those Qualex labs that were, in fact, formerly owned
- by Kodak. It seems that this is NOT true, however, and that the
- Kodalux name is now used by Qualex to indicate their 'flagship' labs.
- In addition, there is some suggestion that Kodak inspects the output
- of Kodalux labs, and holds them to a higher standard. All Qualex
- processing uses Kodak materials, and if you use one of the Kodalux
- labs you might get slightly better processing.
-
- What can I do about people's eye's turning red in my photos?
-
- This is red-eye, caused by light from your flash bouncing off the
- subject's retina, back through the camera lens. Red-eye reducing
- flashes emit a series of low-level flashes before the shutter fires,
- to cause the subject's iris to close a little, reducing the effect.
- Increasing the ambient light, even if only for a moment (with
- a flashlight, say, pointed at the subject's eyes) will accomplish
- a similar effect. Turning up the room lights, if possible, should
- help in the same way. These methods work, but to a limited extent.
- A better solution is to move the flash away from the lens, so
- the bouncing light misses the lens. This can only be accomplished
- with detachable flash units, and one usually does so by putting
- the flash on a bracket, mounting it some distance from the lens.
- Lastly, if you can bounce the flash off the ceiling, or even
- diffuse it to some extent, red-eye will be reduced. Note that
- in these cases, you must adjust your exposure, as less light from
- the flash will actually reach the subject.
-
- How do I take pictures of TV screens/monitors?
-
- Use a tripod and slow shutter speeds. Use a shutter speed of 1/30
- of a second or slower (i.e. 1/15, 1/8 etc..) The longer you can
- make the exposure, the better. Bracket exposures a stop or two
- each way. Longer lenses will help compensate for curvature of the
- screen. Darken the room to help eliminate glare from the screen.
- Do everything you can to align your camera with the screen. It is
- very easy to take crooked pictures!
-
- See Kodak publication AC-10, as well.
-
- What about this 'movie film' I see advertised here and there (Seattle
- Film Works, for example)?
-
- There are several labs that sell this film, and processing.
- Usually they offer to process it into prints and slides, as
- well as give you a free roll. This film is indeed movie film,
- the unused parts of long rolls from the movie industry. As
- such, the age and condition of the film is unknown. Also,
- only a few labs can process the stuff, your local one-hour lab
- cannot. In general, it's probably not a very good deal.
-
- How do I take pictures of fireworks?
-
- You will need a tripod. The idea is to leave the shutter open
- long enough to catch a few bursts. As with flash photography,
- exposure is determined only by aperture. Try F-stop = square-
- root of film speed, as a guideline. With ISO 100 film, try an
- f-stop around f/11, and an exposure of 3-6 seconds, for example.
- Use the widest angle lens you have, 50mm is a little too narrow
- on 35mm camera. Ask your photofinisher to print the sky black,
- lest the print be 'compensated' and come out gray.
-
- Help! I over/under exposed a roll of film!
-
- Color print film overexposed by 1 or 2 stops can be processed
- normally. It's somewhat more sensitive to underexposure. Slide
- film is not nearly as easy-going. Films can be push or pull
- processed, to compensate (to some extent) for under or over
- exposure. Prices for this service vary from a couple bucks a
- roll on up. Shop around.
-
- My prints look all funny! What can I do?
-
- Look at the negatives, to see if they're the problem. If a
- huge blotch appears on the print but not on the neg, or if
- there's no detail in grandma's dress in the print, but you
- can clearly see it in the neg, then get a reprint (and ask for
- it to be done free!). Printing problems are common, and can
- be corrected by re-doing the print right.
-
- How do I get film leaders out of film cans?
-
- If your camera doesn't let you rewind film in such a way as to
- leave the leader out, your best bet seems to be to stop by your
- local photo store and get the little tool they sell for
- extracting leaders from cans. These apparently work really well.
- Some people can fool a power-rewind by popping the back open
- as they hear the film snap off the takeup spool.
-
- The <X> in/on my camera is dirty, how do I clean it?
-
- If it's the mirror, or something in the viewfinder, don't
- worry about it (it doesn't affect image quality). If it's the
- lens, get some lens cleaner and tissue, and follow the
- instructions. Don't worry about minor smudges or specks of
- dust on or inside the lens, they won't have any serious
- impact. Think before scrubbing!
-
- Do I need a 'circular' polarizer, and what is one, anyway?
-
- Circular polarizers are just like regular polarizers, but
- have an additional optical element to stir the light up
- after the filter has done its thing. This stirring keeps
- autofocus mechanisms and some light-metering mechanisms from
- getting confused by polarised light. If the manual says you need
- to use one, you likely do.
-
- Do I need a UV/skylight filter on my lens?
-
- This is a tough call. Such a filter will protect the lens, and
- will alter your images slightly in the positive ways advertised.
- They will also degrade image sharpness slightly, and contribute
- to flare (you get two more air-glass surfaces in the light path).
-
- What about teleconverters?
-
- They degrade image quality noticeably, yes. The best image
- quality is obtained from a lens of the appropriate length.
- Next is a lens + *matched* teleconverter (i.e. a teleconverter
- designed especially for the lens, or lens family), followed by
- a fixed focal length lens with a non-matched teleconverter.
- Using that $90 teleconverter on your 3rd party 70-200mm
- zoom lens will make rotten pictures. Using that Nikon 300mm
- lens with the matched 1.4X teleconverter will make nice
- pictures, you'll probably need a loupe to see degradation
- from a real 400mm lens.
-
- What about mirror lenses?
-
- Mirror lenses are small and cheap and have long focal lengths.
- They also tend to have fixed-size apertures (and slow, typically
- f8 or worse), so you can adjust exposure only with shutter speed
- or filters to reduce light. Finally, they render out-of-focus
- highlights as fuzzy donuts rather than fuzzy dots, which some
- find objectionable.
-
- What's the Zone System?
-
- It's a system of light-metering combined with development
- tailored to each exposure, to produce as good a negative as
- possible. It was developed by the famous photographer Ansel
- Adams, and Fred Archer.
-
- Is there a Zone System for color photography?
-
- Not really. You can use the ideas to get your exposures
- 'right', but development controls are out, since altering
- development makes nasty color shifts. There are various
- unsatisfactory systems published, but this is the short form.
-
- What's the sunny 16 rule?
-
- For taking pictures of objects brightly lit by the sun, in the
- absence of a better guess, expose the film at f/16, with a
- shutter speed of 1/<film ISO> (or equivalent). I.E. ISO 400
- film yields 1/400 sec at f/16, 1/800 sec at f/11 etc.. Choose
- the nearest shutter speed your camera has (1/500 and 1/1000
- in the example, for many cameras).
-
- How do I take a picture of the moon?
-
- Well, the moon is brightly lit by the sun, so use the sunny 16
- rule! Before you say this is crazy, note that it doesn't matter
- how far away Aunt Martha is, as long as she's well lit by the sun,
- right? The moon's a bit farther out.. Often, you want the moon a
- little overexposed (it's a bright white thing, you know) so
- the 'looney 11' rule has been suggested. Use f/11 and 1/ISO
- shutter speed. Also, you really will want a very long lens, lest
- you wind up with a small white dot. The longer the better, really.
- For reference, the moon is around 1/2 a degree wide, while a 50mm
- lens has angle of view around 40 degrees, 300mm has 7 degrees,
- and a 500mm has about 4 degrees. So with a 500mm lens, the moon
- will be about 1/8 of the width of your frame (the long way).
-
- How do I take a picture of a moonlit landscape?
-
- From Jeff MacDonald (jmacdon@cg-atla.UUCP) comes the
- Loony f/4 rule: Set the aperture to f/4 and open the shutter
- for 1/EI days. That is, if you are shooting film at a speed
- of 100, at aperture f/4, use a shutter speed of 1/100 day
- or around 15 minutes. This is, of course, purely a starting
- point, and is based on the illumination of the full moon.
-
- How about some general guesstimated exposure guidelines?
-
- Ok! This is a table of compensations, in stops, from the sunny 16
- rule. E.G. For heavy rain, use 4 stops more exposure, for a backlit
- subject in hazy sun, use 1 + 1.5 to 2 stops more.
-
- I stole this table verbatim from (faust@bagels.enet.dec.com):
-
- Sunny 16 variations Lighting correction
- Bright sun 0 Backlit subject +1-1/2 to +2
- Hazy sun +1 Sidelight Subject +1/2 to +1
- Light clouds +2 (-1/2 under hazy conditions, -0
- Overcast +3 under overcast or shade conditions)
- Heavy rain +4
- Dense Shade +6
-
- One more thing: A rule of thumb for the slowest shutter speed
- you should use, hand-holding your camera, is 1/focal length of
- lens. That is 1/50 sec or so for the standard 50mm lens, 1/300
- sec or so for the long 300mm lens. This is purely a rule of thumb,
- steadier people may get away with slower shutter speeds.
-
- What's a grey card, and what's it good for?
-
- A grey card is, well, a grey cardboard card. It's a specific
- shade of grey, 18% reflectance that's visually about the middle
- between black and white. More usefully, it's also the 'average'
- tone camera meters aim at. Taking a meter reading off of a grey
- card held next to your subject gives you the exposure that will
- render the grey card the right tone on film -- and as a corollary,
- should render a black subject black and a white subject white.
- Metering off the white subject will render it 18% grey, you see,
- which isn't always what you want.
-
- Is there an FTP archive for rec.photo?
-
- Yes! moink.nmsu.edu (128.123.1.46) has a number of possibly
- useful files. Log in as 'ftp' or 'anonymous', with your FTP
- client, please do send your real email address as the password,
- and look around.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- >>>> Equipment - brands, purchasing and quality
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- This section is full of probably unfair generalisations, and
- exceptions to the things said abound. The author has tried to write short
- rules of thumb to be taken with a grain of salt, the most important
- of which is that you tend to get what you pay for. Expensive things
- tend to be better than cheaper things. Do not expect the $30 Pakina
- special to perform as well as the Canon!
-
- The term 'Big Name Manufacturers' is used below to avoid writing
- long lists of manufacturers of things photographic. By way of example
- only, Nikon and Canon are Big Name makers of cameras, Kodak and Fuji
- are Big Name film manufacturers.
-
- What's a good cheap camera?
-
- There are lots of them. Go to your local dealer, and spend
- some time talking and trying things out. Find out what
- features *you* want. Be prepared to take some time to handle
- equipment.
-
- Are the New York mailorder places good?
-
- If you know exactly what you want before you order, they're
- generally ok. Don't let them pressure you into buying extra
- stuff. B&H, Camera World of Oregon, and Adorama are places with
- good reputations. Avoid Cambridge Camera Exchange at all costs.
-
- Who makes the best lenses?
-
- The Big Name manufacturers all make marvelous lenses. Arguing
- about lens quality is a waste of time, since the actual differences
- are not really great. If you want sharper images, use a monopod or
- tripod, or go to a larger film format.
-
- Are Sigma/Vivitar/Tokina/etc lenses any good?
-
- In general, they are not as good as those made by the Big Name
- Manufacturers -- this should not be surprising, since they are in
- general cheaper. The modestly priced zoom lenses are likely fine
- for snapshots. Durability of these lenses is reputed to be lower
- than the Big Name lenses. However, some of these lenses are
- excellent. Use the price as your guide, it's reasonable to guess
- that an expensive Sigma is about as good as a similarly priced
- Nikon, and it may well be worth further investigation.
-
- Who makes the best cameras?
-
- See 'Who makes the best lenses'!
-
- Who makes the best film?
-
- That depends on your application. The standard color print
- films are probably fine for most normal applications. Is
- there a problem with the film(s) you have used in the past?
- If not, stick with them. All the Big Name manufacturers make
- decent films, and there are very few bad films.
-
- Some color print films:
- Under lights of mixed color or fluorescents - Fuji Reala.
- High resolution - Ektar 25.
- High speed - Ektapress 1600 (and other Ektapresses)
- Low contrast - Kodak VPS VPH
- Wide exposure latitude - Gold 100.
-
- Some slide films:
- Good archival qualities - Kodachrome.
- Saturated (bright) colors - Fuji Velvia.
-
- Black & White Slide Film:
- TMax from Kodak, processed in their reversal kit (at home)
- Kodak Duplicating Film (process in Dektol, at home, ISO .5!
- Available from Freestyle in California)
- Agfa DiaDirect. Slow speed direct positive film. Hard to
- find?
-
- I have a chance to buy <X> for $<Y>, is it a good deal?
-
- Get a copy of Shutterbug, and look around in the various
- advertisements for an idea of current prices. If it might be
- a 'classic' of some sort, look at McKeown's or McBroom's
- guides (my local photo shop has a copy they let me look at,
- your local library may well have copies as well).
-
- What should I look for when purchasing used camera equipment?
-
- (the following is a slight rework originally written by
- liang@saul.cis.upenn.edu, forwarded to me by
- Bruce_Barrett@qm.genmagic.com)
-
- Used lenses:
-
- Fungus or mold. hold it up against strong light and put you
- eye close to the rear element. Turn the lens from side to
- side so see if there are any uniform patterns in the lens.
- Dust will not appear uniform. Lenses with one or two
- hairline scratches will not affect image quality, but you
- should bargain for a lower price. In general, scratches on
- the front are less severe as ones on the rear of the lens.
-
- Aperture coupling. If the camera has depth of field
- preview, use it and see that each successive aperture
- setting is smaller (or larger), and make sure that the
- maximum aperture is indeed maximum when the camera is
- fired. If there is no DOF preview, use a slow shutter
- speed.
-
- Iris diaphram speed. On worn lenses, sometimes the
- diaphram blades can not close fast enough, so if you use
- a fast shutter speed, the lens will not be able to fully
- close down to a small aperture before the shutter opens.
- Open the back of the camera and make sure the smallest
- aperture is the same size at maximum speed as at a slow
- speed when fired. Also check for oil on the diaphram
- blades.
-
- Security of mounting. Make sure the lens mounts tightly.
- Even the very slightest wobble could affect focus.
-
- Used cameras:
-
- <This is from me, and could use some work>
-
- Check for obvious damage, overall wear. Heavy wear does not mean
- it won't work, but probably indicates heavy usage. Check the
- shutter -- for focal plane shutters, open the back, for in-lens
- shutters, peer through the lens. Fire the shutter at a variety of
- speeds to verify that it, at least, opens and closes repliably.
- Check the meter, if any. Pointing it at a northern sky during
- the day ought to indicate 1/film-speed shutter speed at f/16
- as a more or less correct exposure, with the lenscap on, it ought
- to indicate (of course) a very long exposure. Try various
- equivalent aperture/shutter-speed combinations (see above) to
- ensure that the meter reads more or less the same for all.
-