I think people are confusing the issue. We are talking about the info between each exposure rather than the printing along the long edge of the 35mm film strip outside the sprocket holes.
Several cameras can on the market can print exposure info between your exposures including the Nikon F80S and of course the 1V. If you look at the opened back of the camera, you might be able to see where the imprinting array is. It is not possible for the processing/developing lab to know what exposure and/or settings you used to make the photograph - okay, perhaps APS cameras might be able since they have a chip inside but that's another story. Incidently, I think that all cameras should have this facility to allow for exposure info recording - students can learn from their mistakes, the advanced amateurs can reproduce their results and the pros can record their data. Jack --- Jani Patanen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Ken Lin wrote: > > hypothesis that the camera likely has to vary the > intensity of the light > > source for the film/frame/exposure imprinting > between the film frames to > > match film ISO rating, as a single pre-set > intensity (say for ISO 200 film > > Camera doesn't do the imprinting between the film > frames, those are done > at the manufacturing plant. Not to mention, they are > exposed correctly > during the manufacturing, so the film was > underdeveloped. __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? LAUNCH - Your Yahoo! Music Experience http://launch.yahoo.com * **** ******* *********************************************************** * For list instructions, including unsubscribe, see: * http://www.a1.nl/phomepag/markerink/eos_list.htm ***********************************************************
