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DREM INTOSCOPE - Extinction Exposure Meter

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    Posted 12 years ago

    vincentanton
    (20 items)

    "This is an Austrian Made Light Meter - Great accessory for the 1930's camera collection, since this was made in 1937.  Complete with original Leather Case.  The "extinction meter" has no electrical components, no cell, no ammeter, no wires. It was pre-photo-electric technology that continued to sell because it was 1/8th the price of even a mediocre selenium meter. It's fun to read some of the ads because they try to play up all the virtues: "won't break if it's dropped, can be used in the rain, it's small and light and a very inexpensive".
    Extinction meters worked on the idea similar to a step wedge, where each section was progressively more dense and harder to read the number or letter in it. A M P X D R F H B
    You peep through the SCOPE and see which is the last letter than can be reasonably seen, because the more light, the more letters will light up; the less light, the fewer letters are visible.
    The outside cylinder of this scope is the exposure computer. The top of the cylinder turns, so you match up the letter to an arrow, then find which column matches your film speed, and that gives you your speed & aperture pairs.
    A nice touch: the eyepiece can be adjusted to focus on the strip inside, so you can use it without glasses. (Diopter adjustment)
     The original DREM is made in Austria. DREM is an acronym for "Dr. Emil Mayer," and they made a lot of variations of this meter with slightly different names. It's marked only in the Scheiner scale.
    How It Is Used:
    At the top there's the part that turns, and there are two rows. The top row has letters that correspond to the letters inside when you look through it. On my DREM, the underneath the letter D, there's a red triangle pointing down. Just below the ring that turns there's the table with all the f/stops and speeds. And at the top of this, just underneath the ring, there's a row with the Scheiner speeds. Mine has 17-19, 20-22, 23-25, 26-28, 29-31. Rotate the ring until the red triangle points to the Scheiner speed for the film you're using. For example, let's say the Scheiner speed is 26. You rotate the red triangle to line up with the 26-28 column. Now, look inside and figure out which letter applies. Let's say it's F. So you find F at the top of the ring and go down that column. Pick a shutter speed from that column. Let's choose the top one, 1/25th. We go sideways along this row until we get to the f/stop list. In this case it's ƒ/1.4.
    If you wanted to add in a filter-factor, and you're shooting through a 4x ND filter. You look at the red triangle and two columns to the right there's a 4x mark. You put that on your Scheiner speed column. Then you take your reading, find your letter, go down the column, pick a shutter, and it tells you your aperture. Or you pick an aperture, and slide sideways along the row until you find the column with your letter, and there's your shutter speed. Pretty nifty item for any collection.

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    Comments

    1. Pop_abides Pop_abides, 12 years ago
      Nice item for your collection. unique.

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