Hello,
Can anyone help me to decide if I would benefit from a correction
lens in my 6x7 eyepiece? (It's a 6x7 MLU with plain prism).
On my LX I have the FA-1 set to mid-range, so assuming a linear
scale that's about -0.75 diopters. This is the viewing experience
that I would like to duplicate
On Fri Apr 15 16:32 , 'William Robb' [EMAIL PROTECTED] sent:
Find out from your optometrist what your glasses correction is, and try to
find a diopter in the same range.
Thanks Bill. I will pay them a visit tomorrow and see what they can do.
I'm sure they'll be able to find me something that
John Francis wrote:
I saw a 2CV6 on the roads out here just a week or so ago.
I don't know just which V6 it had under the hood, but it
certainly wasn't the original 602cc as supplied - it had
a pretty good turn of acceleration.
The 2CV is light, and the 602cc flat twin is fairly torquey.
It's
Didn't one of the French carmakers have a prototype of a little urban
car (if it ever went into production, it certainly never made it to
North America) called the S-Car-Go? I'm thinking Citroen, or maybe
Peugeot...
Nissan did the S-Cargo. A little van from the early 90s with a hint
of 2CV in
Cotty [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The only way would be to mount the 35mm lens *inside* the 645 lens
throat, so that the distance from the back of the K mount lens to the
645D's sensor was 45.46mm - but sadly wew then have the problem of the
645D's mirror hitting the whole kit and caboodle.
Henk Terhell wrote:
Lemon: perhaps blue lemons are almost easier made by GMO techniques than
painted so smoothly like this one. Looks to be a good shot (with the
right caption) for a magazine advertisement.
Thanks Henk. I think the best way to get a similar effect would be
to genetically
On Fri, 9 Jul 2004 12:08 , 'Peter Loveday' [EMAIL PROTECTED] sent:
On the LX at least, OTF metering only works at slower than X speed anyway.
Ah, I didn't realise that. I can see that the ability to respond to light
changes during the exposure (i.e. the integrating aspect) is much reduced
at
Steve Jolly [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Indeedy. Metering with the mirror locked up is nice, but surely the
nicest feature of OTF metering is that it can respond to changes of light
mid-exposure, for which purpose a pattern printed on the shutter is not
required. As far as I can tell, the
On Thu, 08 Jul 2004 21:22 , mike wilson [EMAIL PROTECTED] sent:
I read recently that the LX _mirror_ is SMCed to the tune of 15 coats.
Anyone know the truth of this?
I read the same thing at
http://www.mir.com.my/rb/photography/hardwares/classics/pentaxlx/
If true, does this mean that we can
Mike Wilson wrote:
p.s. I couldn't think of anything for the running water side but I
suppose the fact that the river Tyne has gone from something you would
want to keep well upwind of on a sunny day, to England's premier salmon
river might do it..
The electricity at Cragside was generated
Bill Owens wrote:
Apparently the Optio S uses a flash system similar to the MZ-S. In normal
flash mode there are 2 quick flashed and in red eye reduction there are
three. Has Pentax been able to get a flash sensor inside something this
small?
I don't know how the MZ-S flash works, but I can
Hello,
I wanted to experiment with the low light capabilities of my recently
acquired LX, so last week I went out on a clear night and tried to
take photographs. The results were a little disappointing, and I'm
hoping that somebody will be able to explain why.
I used the LX in 'automatic' mode
The only other thing I can draw is gorillas. Will they do?
Good man.
Dan Scott
Here you are then. My apologies in advance.
http://www.morphet.org.uk/gorillas.gif
Steve.
affected a real photo yet. I'd certainly be interested to know
if the same thing was as likely to occur at higher speeds though.
I hope my observations have added something useful.
Steve Morphet
Herts, UK.
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