Экспонометр Light Flash Meter Capital EF-1 Tundra
3 000 руб.
состояние нового с футляром. Позволяет измерять падающий и отраженный свет. Работа со вспышками в студии. Очень точные результаты измерений. Прост в обращении. Недорого. Перешлю в любое место
This is a Capital EF-1 flash meter. Capital was a relatively common Japanese maker of meters—I only have a couple but there a number of different meters over a wide range of years that carry the Capital badge.
Cambron was the house brand for Cambridge Camera Exchange, a retailer based in New York. They used to run several pages of advertisements in the back of Popular and Modern Photography magazines—an ocean of tiny print. Their prices weren't the best but they made up for it in diversity: if you wanted an idea of what something went for, chances are you could find it listed in the Cambridge ad.
In addition to the name brands, they carried their own house brand, Cambron; from SLR cameras to lenses and flashes on down to gadget accessories. They didn't make anything as far as I know, but they did buy equipment and rebrand it. In some cases, they literally pasted their sticker over the original brand. There's a short piece in Modern Photography that shows the Cambron TTL camera's label being pealed back to reveal the Russian Zenit badge underneath.
That's also the case here; the meter arrived at the house as a Cambron and I couldn't find anything on it. Once I pealed the label back to see what was under it, I was able to it in Ed van der Aa's collection. It also appears to be badged as the Tundra EF-1 (though I haven't actually seen one), and as the Spiratone Expotrol F/A .
Here's an old article from the New York Times that mentions this meter (among others): How Accessory Meters Shed Light on the Subject
HOW TO USE IT
I don't have the instructions for it, but there's not much to it.
Powering Up
1. On the right hand side there's a big slide switch with three positions: EXP, OFF, and FLS. Put the switch in the OFF (middle) position.
2. Load a fresh 9-volt battery into the chamber. There's a slide-cover on the bottom left side, just below the synch cord socket. Inside the chamber there's a label that tells you how the polarity goes.
3. Slide the switch to the EXP (down) position. The red PL should light up on (upper front panel, far right side). The three-digit LED readout in the center of the calculator dial (it says Exposure Value above and below it) should light up and give you a reading in EV numbers.
If the meter doesn't light up at all, try a new 9V battery. If it still doesn't work, turn the battery to reverse the polarity. If it still doesn't work, then your meter is dead.
Assuming it works—
Metering in Continuous Light (aka Ambient) Mode
1. If you want to use the meter as a reflected light meter, slide the white hemisphere dome to the right so that the photocell is exposed. If you want to use the meter as an incident light meter (usually prefe
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