K. Praslowicz

Fine Art Photography?

 

Sekonic Twinmate L-208

The light meters I've known

The first light meter I ever bought for my photography was a Gossen Luna-Pro SBC. That would have been sometime around 2001-2003 when I purchased that meter of off eBay.

I later purchased a Pentax digital spot meter to get more precision when working with large format cameras. The Pentax was bought sometime around 2003-2005.

For the next decade, except for a quick fling I had with a Sverdlovsk 4, that was it for light meter purchases. I wish I could have found the same stability in camera and lens gear as I did with light meters. Could has saved a lot of money.

While the Pentax has served wonderfully as my precision meter for doing zone-system type work with large format cameras, the Luna Pro became my everyday walk around meter while shooting handheld with medium format and 35mm cameras that lack internal light meters.

All was well with these two meters until January 2016 when the Luna Pro just stopped working. New batteries couldn't bring it back to life, and I lack the electrical engineering skills to open it and see if I could fix it.

The hunt for a new light meter

My knee jerk reaction was that I should just buy another identical Luna Pro. Why mess with something that has worked for me for so long?

But after thinking about it, I realized that the bullet points that I used for buying the Luna Pro were no longer the same bullets points of what I wanted in a light meter today.

When I purchased the Luna Pro those bullet points were:

In 2015, I realized that what I wanted in a meter was the following:

I initially didn't expect any companies to be still making old fashioned analog light meters like the Luna Pro, but I was wrong once I found the Sekonic Twinmate L-208. It met my criteria, and I didn't have to deal with getting sold some broken trash of eBay, so I went with it.

Life with the Sekonic Twinmate L-208

I've been using this as my walk around meter for the past year and a half, and so far have no complaints about it. Sure, it doesn't do things like strobe metering, or have the crazy low light capability that the Luna Pro has, but I don't need any of that in a meter indended to just be carried aorund day to day as I do casual street photography.

Basic Specs

The L-208 operates with a single CR2032 battery. I'm still using the same battery that went into it sixteen months ago.

The neck strap this light meter ships with is very long. I can wear it around my neck and still put the meter into my front pants pocket. Although, all a photographer has to do is tie a quick knot into the strap to set it at the desired length. The neck strap's material is thick enough that it doesn't pull into one of those extra tight, impossible to unravel knots.

It also comes with a hot attachment that you could use to mount the meter in your camera's hot shoe. I haven't ever done this as pulling it from my pocket works well enough, and I like to keep my cameras' hot shoes open for actually mounting a flash.

Size DOES count

The biggest gripe I did have with the Luna Pro was the size of that light meter. The size of the meter is ok when stuffed into a bag, or worn around the neck, but pants pockets were out of the question unless you are still sporting early 1990s style JNCO jeans. My tryst with the Sverdlovsk 4 was entirely about trying to find a walk-around meter that would fit easier into my pockets.

The size of the Sekonic L-208 is great in comparison. It fits into the pockets of my pants without taking up the entire pocket or creating an uncomfortable bulge, yet is still large enough that I can take a reading with one hand.

The construction is all plastic, so the L-208 feels a little bit cheap for the price. But in practice, this hasn't been an issue for me. It is holding up very well and delivering accurate incident readings.

If you are looking for a small, no frills, get the job done light meter, I can give the Sekonic Twinmate L-208 high regards.

Buy the L-208 now on Amazon.

6 Archived Comments

Rob
Rob September 25, 2018, 7:48 AM

I took the leather case from an old light meter that was about the same size of the Twinmate and keep it in there, even while I have it around my neck. I don't even bother with batteries for my old cameras that took mercury cells anymore. The Twinmate is accurate for reflective and incidence and is fast. I'm still on the same battery for over 2 years to boot.

K. Praslowicz
K. Praslowicz September 26, 2018, 3:57 PM
↩ In reply to Rob

Oh. Nice idea. I see old, dead light meters in antique and thrift stores all the time. I should keep an eye out for a usable vintage case.

Toby Madrigal
Toby Madrigal June 24, 2018, 6:10 PM

I'm on the lookout for one of these as I've acquired a Leicaflex SL with a non working meter. It will be super to have the convenience of a meter atop the camera in the same plane as the lens. I've been using a handheld meter for a while and it does slow you down. I will find it much quicker to have the meter so close to the camera.

David Murray
David Murray June 18, 2018, 3:19 PM

Two meters I can recommend: the Gossen Lunalite. Easy to use, solid state so no meter needles to be thrown off their pivots with a knock (just 3 LEDs). 9v battery, easy to find and small enough to pack a spare. Also Gossen Multisix. LCD readout, a little more intricate to use but basic instructions are pasted on the back. Same battery as Lunalite. I used Lunalite for more than 20 years and never a problem and still have my two. Had the Multisix last year and using it regularly with a pair of Leica M4-P as the switch has broken on the Leicameter MR4.

Kent Forrest
Kent Forrest December 5, 2017, 4:52 PM

I use an L-308 but am looking for something smaller. I've read some owners reports of feeling their incident readings were off in the 208, but these were brief forum comments with no detail. A consistent, predictable 1-stop high or low for instance would not be a problem if you know about it.

What can you tell me from your real world experience about incident readings from your 208.

K. Praslowicz
K. Praslowicz December 5, 2017, 4:55 PM
↩ In reply to Kent Forrest

Shooting with color film, incident readings have always been fine with it. I trust it more than the internal meter in my Mamiya 6.