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Pentax K100D Super Pictorial Manual
Pentax K100D Super Pictorial Manual

Pentax K100D Super Pictorial Manual

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forums.dpreview.com
http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/post/24921509
K100D (Super) Pictorial guide to using manual lenses
[imgs]
Thanks in large part to the information I've gleaned from this forum, I've just purchased a K100D Super to take
advantage of the Pentax equipment left over from my old film days. In these days of rapid obsolecence, it's
wonderful to be able to buy a modern camera and still be able to use it with my 25- year- old equipment. Kudos,
Pentax!
Once I got the camera set up correctly it works very nicely with my old manual lenses. But I've seen several posts
questioning how to do this, so as a thanks to the forum I've put together the following illustrated guide. Perhaps it
will inspire a few folks who have some old lenses sitting around to wander down to their local camera store and
give them a try.
GETTING STARTED - configuring the camera:
The camera won't allow you to take pictures with manual lenses until you configure it properly. Press the "menu"
button, go right until you see the "Custom Setting" menu, and then go down a few menu pages until you see the
"Using aperture ring" setting:
At this menu item go right, select "Permitted", and hit the OK button.
Now you can use your manual lenses. Note that this only has to be done once, and there's no need change the
setting back again in order to use the auto- aperture or auto- focus lenses. Once you've set it just leave it that way
and your camera will happily work with whatever lens you throw at it.
Next: Getting ready to shoot (see reply)

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Summary of Contents for Pentax K100D Super

  • Page 1 [imgs] Thanks in large part to the information I've gleaned from this forum, I've just purchased a K100D Super to take advantage of the Pentax equipment left over from my old film days. In these days of rapid obsolecence, it's wonderful to be able to buy a modern camera and still be able to use it with my 25- year- old equipment.
  • Page 2 forums.dpreview.com http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/post/24921558 GETTING READY TO SHOOT - mounting a manual lens: First step (pretty obvious really) is to mount the manual lens on your camera. Nothing special here, manual lenses mount just like automatic ones (with the exception of screw- mount lenses which require an adapter. I'm not covering them here because I don't own any, sorry!) The second step is to set the camera to "M"...
  • Page 3 Turn on SR (Shake Reduction) by flipping the switch near the lower- right corner of the LCD: ...and then turn on the camera:...
  • Page 4 When the camera is powered up with Shake Reduction turned on and a manual lens mounted, it will ask you for the focal length of the lens so it knows how much SR to apply when the camera moves. Use the left/right directional keys on the back of the camera to select the proper focal length and press OK.
  • Page 5 forums.dpreview.com http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/post/24921563 SHOOTING: It will take longer to describe this than it does to actually take a shot, so bear with me: First, set the aperture ring on the lens to the f/stop you will use: Next, look through the viewfinder and focus: Half- press the shutter button to turn on the exposure meter:...
  • Page 6 You can tell the meter is on when the green digits below the viewfinder image light up (there's a menu option that controls how long the meter stays on - use if if the digits shut off too quickly for your taste). Because it's a manual lens, the camera has no idea what f/number you've set it to, so it will show "F(blank)"...
  • Page 7 ...and that's it! Once you've got the aperture set in the range you want, the only difference between shooting an automatic vs. a manual lens that you have to focus the manual lens manually (duh!) and you have to press the AE- L button to set the shutter speed.
  • Page 8 K1000 and ME Super cameras. The only caveat is that the smaller APS- C sensor used in Pentax's digital cameras means that lenses have a reduced field of view compared to when they're used on a full- frame 35mm camera. The effect is like multiplying their focal length by 1.5, so that a 50mm lens on a K100 digital camera gives you the same picture you'd get with...