I just happen to believe the aperture setting should be on the lens, the
shutter on the camera body. That makes sence to me. Just like a gear lever
belongs on top of the gear box in a car. Young people never realizes what
the aperture setting actually does.
It's kinda backwards putting it at the back of the body. Soon manual
focusing control will be sitting on the already crowded body as well. I
guess it in fact did just that - on some historic and rather successful (!!)
Minolta body with blue buttons!?
Regards


Jens Bladt
Arkitekt MAA
http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt


-----Oprindelig meddelelse-----
Fra: Godfrey DiGiorgi [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sendt: 26. september 2005 17:54
Til: PDML
Emne: Re: Temporarily enabled with 2.8/70-200mm


You could just learn how to hold the camera such that you didn't hit
the thumbwheel control accidentally. It's pretty simple, really. I've
moved aperture rings on lenses by accident too, until I trained
myself not to grab the wrong ring.  ;-)

Godfrey

On Sep 26, 2005, at 8:42 AM, Jens Bladt wrote:

> ... The thumb wheel is easily moved unintentionaly. A very simple
> way to fix
> this would be to make it work in a way, that it has to be pushed
> forwards
> (into the body) before it can be moved.
>
> Or perhaps I just need a "HOLD" button, to secure my aperture
> setting. (Like
> the HOLD button on the MZ-S holds the shutter speed).
> To me this would be exactly as good a an aperture ring. Except for
> the fact,
> that I own some excellent lenses without an A-setting = no body
> controle
> available.
> ...
> If I had a HOLD APERTURE button I could make sure my aperture
> setting stays
> until I change it. Until I get a button like this, I prefere an
> aperture
> ring for flash photography. ...


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