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<blockquote data-quote="480sparky" data-source="post: 387320" data-attributes="member: 15805"><p>Back in 'the old days', I had a few SLR film cameras that <em>didn't</em> have a DOF button (entry-level ones).</p><p></p><p>My solution was to push the lens release button, turn the lens slightly on it's bayonet mount, causing the lever that holds the aperture open to disengage, and this would cause the aperture to close to what I had set it at.</p><p></p><p>Inconvenient to be sure, but it worked.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="480sparky, post: 387320, member: 15805"] Back in 'the old days', I had a few SLR film cameras that [I]didn't[/I] have a DOF button (entry-level ones). My solution was to push the lens release button, turn the lens slightly on it's bayonet mount, causing the lever that holds the aperture open to disengage, and this would cause the aperture to close to what I had set it at. Inconvenient to be sure, but it worked. [/QUOTE]
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