Selenium meter

From Camera-wiki.org
Revision as of 23:42, 7 January 2012 by Voxphoto (talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search

A selenium meter is a photoelectric light meter, used to determine exposure settings. In the middle four decades of the 20th century, light meters based on selenium electrical cells were the best available to photographers, and were included in many camera designs. By the mid-1960s, physically smaller CdS cells had replaced selenium in most uses.

A selenium photocell produces more or less electric power when exposed to more or less light. Its output of electrical current is connected an indicator, typically a pivoting electromagnetic coil with a lightweight needle attached. The optical part of such a meter is a lens array in front of the photocell's light sensitive side. This is usually structured like a honeycomb made of convex lenses, which narrows the angle of view to which the meter is sensitive. The remaining part of the light meter is an exposure calculator (often in concentric dials), which takes the light reading and film speed as input parameters, then shows the possible aperture/shutter speed combinations for correct exposure.

Dr. Bruno Lange in Germany developed the first practical selenium photoelectric cell. But the Rhamstine's Electrophot DH of 1931 is believed to be the first selenium light meter manufactured for photographic purposes.[1]

As with other light-meter technologies, selenium meters may be entirely separate from the camera, or be made an integral part of one. Large selenium cells, with their "fly's eye" covering, greatly altered the appearance of many mid-century cameras.

Built-in selenium meters are often coupled to a camera's shutter speed control, with a read-out indicating the appropriate aperture (or, vice versa). More sophisticated camera meters may be coupled to both—or even offer exposure control that is fully automatic. (However this was uncommon during the era when selenium cells prevailed.)

Selenium cells may generate less current after many years of exposure to light, heat, and moisture; and thus old selenium meters are often inaccurate (or dead) today. However examples do surface of aged selenium meters still in perfect working order.

Notes

  1. "J. Thos. Rhamstine and the First Electric Exposure Meter" by Richard W. Holzman in Photogram Newsletter, April-May 2008 published by The Michigan Photographic Historical Society


Glossary Terms