As with the PZ-1, if you set the exposure manually and
then turn on the flash, the exposure compensation
wheel adjusts the flash output, IIRC. I believe this
is an undocumented feature.
Rick
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Tom VV explained to moi a few years ago that the
> compensation can be done using the wheel
> on the
> left side of the camera.I dont have mine with me at
> the office,but he suggested that
> moving the wheel
> from the standard 1X position gave the compensation.
>
> Dave
>
> > So what is the "obvious" flash
> compensation? I
> assume use manual
> > mode, but dial in exposure compensation and then
> use the meter to
> > reach -1 instead of +-0 ?
> >
> > I have also used flash on auto instead of TTL and
> just dialed the
> > f-stop to a stop or two smaller than the flash
> figured I was using.
> > Of course, that often bumps into the flash synch
> speed.
> >
> > Joe
> >
> >
> > > and flash compensation is only
> > >"obvious" once you've already learned it (and
> IIRC not described
> > >in the manual -- it's also the one clumsy
> operatin on that body),
> >
> >
> > > And finding out
> > >how flash compensation works on the Super Program
> reminds me of
> > >looking at the hexadecimal machine code on the
> VAX and realizing
> > >that the "immediate" addressing mode was
> implemented in the
> > >hardware as "auto-increment indirect using the
> program counter".
> > >
> > > -- Glenn
> >
> >
>
>
>
>
>
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