I shot the wedding ceremony with both my D and the K10 in available light. My D 
was set with a half stop over exposure comp, the K10 was baselined. The 
exposures were virtually identical.
Paul
 -------------- Original message ----------------------
From: "William Robb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> 
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "J. C. O'Connell"
> Subject: RE: Need Advice: value of an *istD outfit
> 
> 
> > huh? the original poster already stated
> > that his two pentax DSLRs  were not
> > matched with respect to meter sensistivity.
> > What does "self containment" ( whatever
> > you mean that to be ) have to do with
> > metering sensitivity? Or are you trying
> > to say that are all perfectly matched
> > to each other intially and forever?
> > What if you dont Like or want the
> > metering sensitivity the camera gives
> > you ?( like the other poster didn't, he
> > had to use exp. compensation to get what
> > he wanted)
> 
> I'll explain this once, and hope you can get your head around it.
> Self contained means that they aren't dependant on an outside source to 
> do what they are supposed to do..
> As an example, a film camera requires film to do it's job, therefor it 
> is not self contained.
> 
> To match two DSLR cameras, you need to get the outputs (histograms) to 
> match. This is easily done with exposure compensation.
> 
> William Robb
> 
> >
> > This sort of user calibration would seem to be pretty unnecessary too,
> > since DSLR cameras are self contained. Calibrating one to the other
> > would merely involve getting the histograms consistent.
> >
> 
> 
> 
> 
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