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Topic: Sankyo super 8mm
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Douglas Meltzer
Moderator
Posts: 4554
From: New York, NY, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
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posted December 31, 2010 01:10 PM
Anna,
The filter control on the 40S moves the color compensation filter in and out. Keep it in the down position (filter in) for shooting in daylight. Lift it up (filter out) when shooting indoors under tungsten light or for nighttime exteriors.
The 6 AA batteries power the camera and the built in exposure meter. Slide the power switch to the on position. Set the aperture control (located above the logo on the right side of the camera, if you're holding it as if you were shooting) to "auto". Look through the viewfinder and you'll see the F stops at the bottom. If the needle moves when you point it at different light sources, the meter is working. The meter might have been set to "manual" when you shot previously, which would explain the extreme overexposure problem.
The 40S was built to use either Kodachrome 40 or Ektachrome 160 movie film. These are no longer available. Ektachrome 64T or 100D can be used but the automatic exposure will be incorrect, however it's worth a try. When shooting with 100D, leave the filter in the up position. That film is meant for daylight, so you'd need to screw on an 80A filter (blue) to shoot indoors (but you'd need brightly lit interiors).
Doug
-------------------- I think there's room for just one more film.....
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