stopped and
then pull it away to start the exposure.
Kent Gittings
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Peter Spiro
Sent: Thursday, October 25, 2001 11:26 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: K2 shutter vibration question
Various tests have found
The following is from Peter:
Date: Fri, 26 Oct 2001 03:25:33 +
From: Peter Spiro [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: K2 shutter vibration question
Anybody who has a K2 can test for this quite easily.Lock up the mirror,
set the shutter speed to B, and release the shutter with a cable
Robert Soames Wetmore writes:
I've always admired the K2 as the ultimate of the Pentax K's. It has a
feeling of solidity and a weight that bothers some but pleases me.
I like the K2 as well. I have two of them which I use alongside my Z-1p.
Solid, well-built and reliable, provided
***
However, I keep hearing that its (Seiko-sha?) metal focal plane shutter
induces a fair amount of vibration [see typical excerpt below]; this would
sort of defeat the whole idea of MLU (which is the main reason I am thinking
***
Yes, the vibration of the shutter is very strong. It can be
Various tests have found that small differences in camera vibration can make
big differences in resolution at moderately slow shutter speeds. People on
the Olympus list have tested their cameras with or without diaphragm
pre-fire, and it turns out that even the vibrations from the diaphragm
I've always admired the K2 as the ultimate of the Pentax K's. It has a
feeling of solidity and a weight that bothers some but pleases me. Like the
KX, it has DOF preview and MLU, but in some other respects is specified even
better. For its time it is a fine manual camera - and quite useful
Hi,
On 24 Oct 2001 at 10:29, Robert Soames Wetmore wrote:
I've always admired the K2 as the ultimate of the Pentax K's.
It is.
However, I keep hearing that its (Seiko-sha?) metal focal plane
shutter induces a fair amount of vibration (...)
Can anyone confirm that this is true? Is
I think the part about shutter vibration is complete bullsh*t. Perhaps the
metal shutter vibrates a *little* more than the cloth shutter of the other
K cameras. But enough to negate the benefits of locking up the mirror???
Hogwash.
[...]
Between its mass and mirror lock-up it produces *very*
Robert Soames Wetmore wrote:
I think we also should include the vibration because our heart beats when
the camera is hand holded and... Alexandre Suaide
I'm not sure if you meant this as a joke, but I actually have this very
problem. It is a major factor in shooting hand-held.
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