In a message dated 6/4/02 2:00:48 AM Central Daylight Time, chadwh...@mac.com 
writes:

> what is a good light meter for pinhole  f-stops ? i am lurking e-bay ,i 
>  what to buy a light meter that can be used practically for pinhole. i 
>  don't want to use the math. i just want a simple light meter so i can 
>  spend my energy taking pinhole images. i noticed that most light-meters 
>  stop about f-16. f-225 or higher is better for me.
>  
  I dont know what light meters you have looked at , but many if not most  go 
further than f/16..... but stop around the f/128 range, but that is not a 
definite, what you might consider is this, is getting a light meter, then 
getting a pinhole exposure calculator , its a card board affair, and you 
simply move the dial around to line up the f/stop to the time exposure , or 
else there are ones that have a sleeve , you simply adjust up and down again 
aligning f/stop to exposure .
And if you feel so inclined, you can even make yor own , much like a slide 
rule , marking off even increments, with f-stops on one piece, and exposures 
on the second , and again simply line up what your hand held meter says, and 
compensate for it, on your homemade slide ruler/exposure calculator ,  I did 
this before I bought one of Zernike's Zero Image cameras(and yes , its a plug 
for Zernikes cameras, I have no shame !!!)  that has a dial on it and I 
compensate after having read my meter, some one correct me here, but isnt 
there also some " gadget called CatEye pinhole exposure calculator for sale 
on the market ? seems to me price was around 15.00 +/-   USD ...... 

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