
Hi! I just received this gem from Ace Digital Club. BTW, I have made numerous purchases from them with no problems. I suspect they themselves procured this from the Smithsonian as it was old enough that that case had adhered to the foam packaging and the battery was dead. ( This is by no means a criticism, I am just being facetious that this is not the most popular meter on the shelf )
This is a large, very well built meter. It weighs 8.1 oz with the strap. It reads down to about -1.5 EV at 100 ISO. It is DEAD on with the Gossen StarLite at that value in a dark hall way. ( I just had a seizure using the StarLite when I changed the ISO on the StarLite . It doesn't take much with me. That is why I decided to try this unit ).
The Gossen Luna Pro F is a TOTALLY analog unit. It is powered by a 9 volt battery. It is unusual insofar as it is a nulling unit. Ie, you turn it on by pushing the large red button on the left side of the unit and then you rotate the outer dial until the needle is centered on the large 0 in the center of the scale. ( This is the very old-fashioned accurate test and measurement technique back from Edison and Tesla ) You can then read the EV, zone , or the aperture / shutter speed. The dial is about 2 1/2 inches in diameter. This is a LARGE unit. I still need my reading glasses though to read the dial although not to null the meter. ( My glasses are about 2.75 )
After, I think ten light meters, I have only found three that I can use without having seizures.
1) Gossen Luna-Pro F ( Analog -1.5 EV ISO 100 )
2) Sekonic L-398A ( Analog EV 4 ISO 100 ( optimistic ) )
3) Sekonic L-778 ( Unavilable SPOTMETER )
4) Gossen StarLite is BARELY accessible ( my normal light meter )
5) Sekonic L-758DR is TOTALLY inaccessible ( history )
6) Other Sekonics marginally accessibly ( I use them but BEWARE of flashing UNDER RANGE )
Accessibility is definitely not a design feature. I use the term 'dangerous by design', unfortunately. I just got rid of my Nikon D40X and D80 because they were unusable. Ironically I had a seizure at UPS from the VDT when I was shipping them off. ( I was six or eight feet away and at maybe a ten or fifteen degree angle of incidence ).
After years of attempting to get accessibility from numerous companies I feel now that it is necessary that the Americans with Disabilities Act be amended so that companies are required to provide accessibility as it is clear that with the few exceptions of Adobe and Mathworks, no companies are willing to do so.
Anyways, if you have the money, purchase this unit just for the fun of it. It is a kick to use and it beats lifting weights!
Roy
Buy Luna-Pro F - Analog Incident, Reflected and Flash , 4030,!