Recently, as posted here,
I bought an oldish Sekonic L-398 - the one that looks like
the really old Norwood Director model. After a lot of reading, I found out that the meter doesn't always read actual foot candles:
that depends on what you mount on the swivel thingy.
Now, "analog" meters are not very sensitive in low light; in fact, I would be disinclined to believe any reading below about 10fc. However, I've noticed that the meter gives a much higher reading with nothing installed in the swivel - sort of the opposite effect of installing the HIGH slide into the swivel.
Having just bought the latest model L-398A with the "memory" pointer, I put it under some kitchen lighting and took two readings:
Dome on: it read about 20fc . . a 6 Ev scene.
Dome off: it read about 200fc for the same scene.
While I realize that the bare recessed sensor has neither a cardioid (dome) nor a cosine (disk) response, wouldn't it be nice if one could "just" subtract so many Ev and come up with an appropriate exposure?
Like for example the above ratio 200/20 is about 3-1/3 EV - so one would transfer the 200fc and see 9-1/3 Ev in the Ev window and then crank that down until it says 9-1/3 minus 3-1/3 = 6 Ev.
Thus the recommended f/8 @ 1/10 sec becomes f/8 @ 1 sec.
Advice to buy a digital lightmeter will be studiously ignored . .