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I love my MP.

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You guys are going to pay for this. :mad:

 

I was saving for M-M, but then stumbled upon this thread.

 

Receiving a new MP next Thrusday - will post pictures. :D

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Can someone please clarify my understanding of the MP's TTL metering? When looking through the viewfinder, are there arrows indicating whether the cameras current settings will produce an under or overexposed shot? I've looked at the instruction manual for the MP and this is my understanding of it, but am I correct?

 

Forgive my newbie question, but I need to understand how the MP visually indicates it's metering result in order to decide between buying the MP (My Preference) or the M7, either of which will be my first leica. I'm selling my d3x, which I used only in manual mode, and with MF lenses, so I'm hoping this will help me adapt.

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Yes there are two arrows and a dot, all red. When just the dot shows the MP's meter is telling you that you have correct exposure within the area that it can see, which is roughly the same as centre-weighting in a SLR or dSLR. The arrows tell you when you are under- or over-exposed and you should alter the shutter speed and/or aperture until just the dot shows.

 

Pete.

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Yes there are two arrows and a dot, all red. When just the dot shows the MP's meter is telling you that you have correct exposure within the area that it can see, which is roughly the same as centre-weighting in a SLR or dSLR. The arrows tell you when you are under- or over-exposed and you should alter the shutter speed and/or aperture until just the dot shows.

 

Pete.

 

Many Thanks, Pete!

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Just got this....:):):)

 

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alw, let me be the first to wish you a "lifetime" of happy shooting. :)

 

Cheers! In fact, the MP feels so precious and jewellery-like, that I´m afraid of touching it!

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Cheers! In fact, the MP feels so precious and jewellery-like, that I´m afraid of touching it!

 

the more paint it loses, the more brass in view, the better it gets....poor parallels are stonewashed jeans, worn western saddles, darkened pinewood furniture......it needs to radiate use, adventure, experience, real-life. Don't let your camera become the equivalent of a shiny, polished, city-driven 4x4 with white leather seats and low-profile rims. Get it used. Get it scratched. Let it graduate. Give it a life!

 

..... oh and don't dress it up in a designer leather protector! :)

 

(top plate edges of mine now fully brassed. Bottom plate edges still partially under paint)

Edited by Mark Pedley
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I've just looked on the PDF instruction manual for the MP. On page 69 it says

 

"Setting the film speed

Using the setting dial (27), you can select the

film speed by setting one of the values in the

range ISO 6 to 6400. (ISO is the international

designation for film speeds.)

To do this, turn the locking dial until the desired

value is aligned with the white index point (26)."

 

Does the ISO selector wheel on your MP not rotate???

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