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What Modes to Use, M, A, or S


rycm

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My experience is that the only way to get consistently correct exposure is the M mode - and I use A when I don't want to bother and lighting conditions are easy.

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Err, let me think... Super, Supreme, Stupendous, Superior, Sensational, Serious, Standard-Setting. Am I close?

 

I thought it meant 'Solms' mode. After selecting it once, you have to send your camera back for attention. :rolleyes: (At least that's what my Imp told me after returning from Solms.)

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I use A mode most of the time just because it is easier and I'm always going from light areas to darker areas.

I shoot RAW 99% of the time and I don't have a M8.2 so there is no S mode (thank God) for me. The times I don't shoot in A mode is in low light with fixed light. But that is not to say I don't adjust the shutter speed from what the camera meter suggests. I will appraise the scene and adjust the shutter speed by moving the meter area off the main subject to change the shutter speed then lock it and reframe.

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M8 without S function (thank God): I use M mostly, but use A as a light meter. And A when the light is easy or I'm in a hurry.

 

BTW: when just walking around, I always put my camera on A and f5.6 or f8 aqnd lens at almost infinity. You don't want to be fiddling and turning and thinking when, for instance, the Queen comes by on a bike :D

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Would use M more except for one huge drawback with the M8: I can't see the shutter speed! I find this so unsettling that it breaks my concentration! Why Leica don't display the shutter speed like every other modern camera, I don't know! It's like driving a car without a speedo! :confused:

 

So, thoughts, folks...

 

Same for me. I'm always wondering what the shutter speed is. That is why I use A mode most of the time. If and when I do set the shutter speed manually I very rarely change it.

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In fact, I'd be very interested to hear how people keep track of manual shutter speeds on the M8. OK, I can see for one shot you'd have a reasonable idea, but surely walking around in changing light (sun, shadows), you'd soon lose track. How do you know that the speed is fast enough to freeze the subject's movement or prevent camera shake? :confused:

 

I'm not saying it is practical, in fact I would like to see what I am doing as well, but for the time being us old dogs are using the method adopted by M photographers since time immemorial: we count the clicks.

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I'm not saying it is practical, in fact I would like to see what I am doing as well, but for the time being us old dogs are using the method adopted by M photographers since time immemorial: we count the clicks.

 

And mostly I'm not in such a hurry that I don't have the time that when I go for a speed setup, I take a sneak look at the dial :D Although it beats me too why Leica just doesn't put speed and aperture in view.

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I would use M as well, but I do then to miss the mark often.

Use the M! As jaapv says, that is the only way to get consistent exposures. Sure you are going to miss a few. That's what the view screen is for. If the exposure is wrong take another shot.

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