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Thread: Spot Meter for Low Light Situations

  1. #1

    Spot Meter for Low Light Situations

    I'm planning a couple of photo excursions next year in slot canyons with very lo w light and am concerned about the sensitivity of my light meter, which is the S ekonic L508. Although its published sensitivity is only 1 EV less than others l ike the Pentax Digital and Minolta Spot meters, I recalling having read a few re ports that it is not sensitive enough in low light situations. Has anyone here who uses the L508 had problems in low light situations? Have you found it adequ ate in those situations? How are the Pentax and Minolta spots in low light situ ations? I'm leaning towards purchasing the Minolta if I get another meter becau se it has a memory function, which I use a lot on the Sekonic. Thanks for your feedback.

  2. #2

    Join Date
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    Spot Meter for Low Light Situations

    Howard, FWIW, I have used my Zone VI modified Pentax spotmeter in many low light situations (including slot canyons, which were not all that dark!) I have never found a practical situation where the Pentax digital was not able to function. Of course, I try not to work in total darkness, but the Pentax reads down to EV 3 with no problem. Hope this helps, ;^D)

  3. #3

    Spot Meter for Low Light Situations

    I have used the Pentax digital spot in many low light situations including slot canyons. I recall a few cases where the meter reading never exceeded eV 3 and went all the way to 0. My exposures were just fine given the appropriate amount of exposure compensation for the film used of course. One shot I had in Antelope canyon lasted for 12 minutes. Astia gave a very interesting color shift in this case! A little more purplish than I remember.

  4. #4

    Spot Meter for Low Light Situations

    Sekonic has a discussion board similar to this one on their web site that you might want to check out. This topic is discussed.

  5. #5

    Spot Meter for Low Light Situations

    Howard,

    I have the 508. I shoot some cities at night and have noticed it does not seem as sensitive as I would like. I end up spot metering something lighter and working backwards from there. I almost always shoot a polaroid to check anyway. The lowest I have been able to get it to read is 30 minutes at F32 and this is far lower than anything I have shot...

    It took me 10 minutes to learn - quite an intuitive device. It would be nice if the values showed up in the spot window but this is a small quibble.

    I have never owned another meter so I cannot compare to the others' low light sensitivity...

  6. #6

    Spot Meter for Low Light Situations

    Howard, I have the 508, and find that its incident reading ability is much better than its spot reading ability... I also have the 778 Sekonic, which is a far superior light meter in the spot mode. When I am shooting in dark areas, I have had times when all light meters have failed me, meaning the meter can not measure such low light levels. If you are shooting a slot canyon mid day, I doubt you will have this problem, but if its overcast or evening / morning, I am sure there will be areas that can experience this. My fix was buying a Quantam light meter that measures down to -5 EV. Its an old fashion incident meter, but at least I know where I stand in certain parts of my scene that my others meter will not register.

  7. #7

    Spot Meter for Low Light Situations

    I tried the 508 when it came out. The spot meter isn't quite as sensitive as Pentax Digital Spot meter, which I now own and the reason I returned the 508. I thought the spot meter sensitivity of 508 is EV 3 whereas pentax (or minolta, sekonic) spot meters can get down to EV 1. So the difference should be EV 2. I'm very happy with the pentax and it's very fast to read and adjust the exposure settings. But if you want memory functions, then your choice is toward the Minolta or Sekonic, etc.

  8. #8

    Join Date
    Jan 2000
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    29

    Spot Meter for Low Light Situations

    Howard,

    I had a Sekonic 508 and found that the low light sensitivity was a problem for me. I found a great deal on a Gossen Ultra Pro and the spot attachment and like the low light capabilities of this meter. However, I REALLY miss the compact form factor and user interface of the Sekonic.

    -harry

  9. #9

    Join Date
    May 1999
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    553

    Spot Meter for Low Light Situations

    What about the L508 Cine version? Is this version better than the older L508?

  10. #10
    Yes, but why? David R Munson's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 1999
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    Saitama, Japan
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    1,494

    Spot Meter for Low Light Situations

    I've been using the Zone VI modified Spotmeter for a few years now and it's wonderful. It's very accurate and consistently gives me wonderful results. There have been a couple times when the light level was too low for the meter to give any useful reading (everything measurable falling at zone III or below). In those rare occasions I whip out my Quantum Calcu-Light XP, a meter which I swear can measure any amount of light and be dead on. As for the memory function, the Pentax is analog, so when you set the dial you've got all appropriate exposure combinations at your fingertips until the light changes or until you change it. It's a joy to use and is very reliable in all kinds of conditions.

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