Scott,With my R9 (and DMR attached), and with either a 50mm Canada ROM lens or a 90mm Canada non-ROM lens, I get the same results in all three camera metering modes with the camera in the Aperture Priority (A) Mode.
When I change aperture, as soon as I hear the click of the physical detent in the lens, the new shutter speed appears in the VF, with no lag, no delay.
Of course the camera is running on the bigger, rechargeable DMR battery and not the usual R9 batteries. I have no idea whether that could make a difference.
That's all the data I have to offer, and all I can recommend is to somehow try the R9 with a different lens to see if that makes a difference.
Good luck, Bill On Sep 27, 2009, at 1:48 PM, Scott McLeod wrote:
Hello all, This is my first post to this forum so I hope I get it right! I recently had the opportunity to put a roll of film through a brand-new R9 (it had literally never been shot before). It belongs to my boss who bought it months ago without a lens (long story). He finally decided to get a used 50/2 Summicron (Canada) for it and instructed me to "go test it". Needless to say I didn't have to be asked twice! Anyway, the scans came out very nice indeed and I could find no optical problems with the lens, but my boss is *extremely* picky and he "didn't like the look of it" so he returned it and the R9 once again rests in its milled-foam packaging in the bottom drawer of his desk. What I did notice was something rather strange - I shot the camera in A mode, and when changing aperture on the lens there was a very noticeable delay in the VF display updating - it never actually stuck, but it seemed sluggish in a way that I have never seen before with any camera (including very old Minolta, Nikon and Canon SLRs; the metering display in my M6 TTL responds instantaneously to changes in aperture). This particular lens, while optically fine, did have an unexpectedly "industrial" feel to it (I can't think of a better way to express it). It certainly did not have the silky, jewel-like precision I was expecting from a Leica lens (or a Zeiss ZM for that matter). I was wondering, is this normal behavior for the R9 in A mode, or is this an anomaly? Everything else on the camera seemed to have a superb precision feel. Maybe this lens had led a hard life and was not behaving as it should, I dunno.Sorry for the long post - any advice on this topic would be greatly appreciated!Thanks Scott McLeod ------ Unsubscribe or change to/from Digest Mode at: http://www.lrflex.furnfeather.net/ Archives are at: //www.freelists.org/archives/leicareflex/
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