dredge wrote in post #17895259
Sorry mate, but I think you've misunderstood, the
teacher is the one that wants this to happen. They are the one telling me it should be working differently, acting as a light meter and clocking up and down whilst in TV mode. By 'for the purposes of this class' I don't mean it should actually be doing that, I mean the teacher believes it should be and is trying to get me to fix the camera so it does so.
You're basically telling me that what I have been told by the teacher is incorrect, but then telling me I oughtn't be arguing with them about it, so I guess you think I'm the one trying to change this. I am not. I'm trying to appease my teacher, but from what I'm understanding that's not going to be possible.
Sorry if I've been unclear.
Cheers. I do know how to change the EC, and I'd already checked through the manual looking for a workaround for what the teacher was wanting, but I appreciate it.
Well, one of us is not understanding something. I think the most likely culprit in our inability to understand each other is my poor explanations. I apologize. I know I understand cameras. Explaining myself, perhaps not so much. Please allow me to try again.
The little pointer you see in Manual mode is telling you how the selections you have made (ISO, shutter, aperture) compare to the 'standard' exposure for the scene in question. It is essentially a light meter. It has nothing to do with exposure compensation.
When you switch to Av or Tv, that little pointer is no longer a light meter. It is another parameter for you to set. Most people refer to it exactly as you do: exposure compensation or EC. If it is in the middle, you have selected 0EC. If you want the recorded scene to be a little brighter, YOU dial in some positive EC. If you move the little pointer (press in the [+/-] key, turn the main dial) to the right 2 notches, you have dialed in +2/3EC. If you move it 4 notches to the left, you have dialed in -4/3EC. The first choice will get you a brighter scene. That would be something you'd dial in if you were shooting a white wedding dress in a mostly white church. You add exposure to keep the dress from being grey/dull. A situation where you may want to dial in -EC is shooting a mostly dark scene. The camera will tend to over expose, greying out the blacks. You want -EC (at some level) to make the blacks stay black.
Let me summarize. If you want some positive EC (in either Av or Tv) hold the [+/-] key down and turn the front dial to the right. For every click you turn the dial, the little pointer will move one click to the right, and you photo will be 1/3 stop brighter. If you want negative EC, hold the key down, and turn the front dial to the left. If you move it 3 clicks, you will have dialed in -1EC.
For all but the top-notch cameras, EC is not available in Manual mode. You just dial in the exposure you want. In Av, Tv, P, and maybe [GreenBox], you have access to EC, which is just another selection the photographer has to make, much like ISO, shutter speed, and aperture. I hope I have been more clear this time. And good luck with your class.