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<blockquote data-quote="rocketman122" data-source="post: 299206" data-attributes="member: 14443"><p>gossen minolta or sekonic all make great light meters. if you do a lot of studio work then investing in a more feature rich model might be fine, but me personally, I still have my 10 yr old sekonic 718 and 5º spot add on and it does more than what I need. only thing I hate is that it does shutter speed in full stops only, but, I get along. I dont see a reason to invest a lot in a light meter. I salute you for buying one. everyone should learn how to use one. incident spot reflective. </p><p></p><p>I personally would look at an older L-508 or 608. they charge way too much for a light meter today. something that was way more relevant with studio and film where you needed extreme accuracy when shooting with slide film. today, point, shoot, adjust on the fly.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="rocketman122, post: 299206, member: 14443"] gossen minolta or sekonic all make great light meters. if you do a lot of studio work then investing in a more feature rich model might be fine, but me personally, I still have my 10 yr old sekonic 718 and 5º spot add on and it does more than what I need. only thing I hate is that it does shutter speed in full stops only, but, I get along. I dont see a reason to invest a lot in a light meter. I salute you for buying one. everyone should learn how to use one. incident spot reflective. I personally would look at an older L-508 or 608. they charge way too much for a light meter today. something that was way more relevant with studio and film where you needed extreme accuracy when shooting with slide film. today, point, shoot, adjust on the fly. [/QUOTE]
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