Theo Sulphate
Member
I am constantly impressed by the autoexposure of my Minolta Maxxum 7. It may or may not not be the best, as I have no way to objectively compare, but it's very good.
The easiest manual in camera meter I ever used was on a Pentax Spotmatic.
That's right - my Maxxum 7 has handled some difficult lighting situations very well. It's a very versatile camera.
As for the Spotmatic, which lost its spot-ness before being brought to market in 1964, I've had less than an ideal relationship with that meter's implementation. See, in 1971 I desperately wanted an SrT-101, but couldn't afford it. Rather than get its poor-sister SrT-100, which would only serve as a sad reminder, I swung 180 degrees away from what I really wanted and got a Pentax SP-500. Having that very different camera instead would take my mind off the SrT-101. However, as you know, when you push up on the side-mounted meter switch, the lens aperture stops down. If you release the shutter, the aperture opens back up afterwards and the switch goes down. BUT, if you decide not to make a photo, or you just want to look around with the meter on, then to turn the meter off, you have to manually pull that switch down. Well, that's where the problem is because the switch "catches" a bit when you pull it down. Within *one week*, my switch broke off. The dealer accused me of all sorts of things, but it got repaired under warranty. Well, not wanting to go through that again, I devised a new way to use the meter: switch the lens lever from Auto to Manual first, then, when you push the lever up, there's no resistance and no catch: you just hold the meter switch up with your finger and when you release your finger the switch comes down smoothly. Yes, you're still stopped-down and it's slow, but it's not going to break. Eventually, I just stopped using the meter and figured out all the exposures in my head. That's what I did for 15 years with the Pentax as my only camera.
That's what I do as well with my F2's: no battery or metering, I use the Photomic head just to see the aperture.