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EOS R6 Mark II light meter disappears when shooting on fixed ISO

ImLMHK
Contributor

Hello. I'm having a problem with my R5 II that I hope you all can help me with. I normally shoot on manual with Auto ISO. When I do that, my light meter can be seen on the bottom of the screen. See Pic1. But when I change from Auto ISO to a fixed ISO, the light meter disappears from the bottom of the screen. See Pic2. I’ve changed the VF vertical display (found under Shooting display info under the 9th (last) tab of the Shooting (red) menu) to Yes and No and back again. Repeatedly. It doesn’t help. The only thing that I’ve found that makes the light meter reappear at the bottom of the screen is to switch the ISO back to Auto. But that's not always the setting I want to use. Can anyone tell me how to make the light meter stay on the bottom of the screen regardless of my ISO setting? Thank you in advance. Mary

The light meter is visible at the bottom of the screen when shooting on Auto ISOThe light meter is visible at the bottom of the screen when shooting on Auto ISOThe light meter is no longer visible at the bottom of the screen when shooting on fixed ISOThe light meter is no longer visible at the bottom of the screen when shooting on fixed ISO

 

13 REPLIES 13

March411
Authority
Authority

The scale you reference is exposure compensation and it is explained in great detail here: Exposure Compensation 

There are several links in the link which will give you the information on Ex Comp for each mode. The Canon Knowledge Base for each camera offers an incredible amount of information. 

From the knowledge base: Exposure compensation can brighten (increased exposure) or darken (decreased exposure) the standard exposure set by the camera. Exposure compensation is available in Fv, P, Tv, Av, and M modes. For details on exposure compensation when M mode and ISO Auto are both set, see M: Manual Exposure, and see Fv: Flexible-Priority AE for Fv mode.


Marc
Windy City
Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people. Discussion is an exchange of knowledge; an argument an exchange of ignorance

R5 Mk II ~ R6 Mk III ~ R7
Lenses: RF Trinity and others
Adobe and DxO PhotoLab Elite for post processing

Personal Gallery

Hi Marc,

Thanks for the response!

I know all about exposure compensation and I use it frequently. I am actually a very experienced photographer. I've been using an r6 and an r6 II for years and DSLRs and film cameras before that. I just decided to upgrade to the R5 II. And my r6's show the gauge regardless of my ISO setting.

Whatever you call. it, that gauge is an indication of exposure. It is a light meter. It shows the exposure of the scene in the viewfinder. And without it, how am I supposed to determine how the lighting of the scene can be judged against what a light meter would consider neutral exposure? Yes, I can use the smaller light meter that shows vertically on on the screen, but that is so much smaller that it's just not that useful. And, yes, I could use the histogram but that is much more subjective. 

So are you saying that the R5 II won't show that gauge on the horizontal unless I want to forever shoot on Auto ISO? 

You need to have at one of your 3 exposure methods on auto for the compensation to work and your screen shot on the second photo shows full manual.

Karl

March411
Authority
Authority

I'll go with light meter because I also use it to assist in setting exposure when using auto ISO.

I believe the reason it disappears when using manual ISO is because the camera doesn’t have any automated settings to calculate an exposure compensation value. When I shoot with this method I depend on ExpSim through the viewfinder. 


Marc
Windy City
Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people. Discussion is an exchange of knowledge; an argument an exchange of ignorance

R5 Mk II ~ R6 Mk III ~ R7
Lenses: RF Trinity and others
Adobe and DxO PhotoLab Elite for post processing

Personal Gallery

kvbarkley
Legend
Legend

You have fixed Shutter speed, aperture and ISO. What can the camera adjust to get you the requested exposure compensation? I believe the exposure meter is on the right.

stevet1
Elite
Elite

Mary,

Try pushing your Info button a couple times and see if it shows up.

Other than that, it may have something to with your metering timer. I have a T8i, and it might behave differently than yours, but if I half-press my shutter button, the light metering scale shows up, but only stays on for about six seconds and then it disappears, but that behavior occurs whether I am in Auto ISO or a fixed ISO.

Steve Thomas

Jkarl
Rising Star

Pic2.jpg

If you look on the right side of the your photos  you will find the exposure scale to be used when all settings are set as manual. This position can be modified.

Karl


@ImLMHK wrote:

Hi Marc,

Thanks for the response!

I know all about exposure compensation and I use it frequently. I am actually a very experienced photographer. I've been using an r6 and an r6 II for years and DSLRs and film cameras before that. I just decided to upgrade to the R5 II. And my r6's show the gauge regardless of my ISO setting.

Whatever you call. it, that gauge is an indication of exposure. It is a light meter. It shows the exposure of the scene in the viewfinder. And without it, how am I supposed to determine how the lighting of the scene can be judged against what a light meter would consider neutral exposure? Yes, I can use the smaller light meter that shows vertically on on the screen, but that is so much smaller that it's just not that useful. And, yes, I could use the histogram but that is much more subjective. 

So are you saying that the R5 II won't show that gauge on the horizontal unless I want to forever shoot on Auto ISO? 


Are you sure your R6 showed the exposure scale on the right side of the viewfinder. I only have the bottom scale with my R6 Mark III. 

John Hoffman
Conway, NH

R6 Mark III, M200 (converted to infrared), RF lenses, Pixma PRO-100, Pixma TR8620a, Lr Classic

John

I have the R6Mii and the exposure display is on the bottom. With the R5Mii it is by default on the right of the screen with a vertical orientation. I think that OP is used to seeing it in the bottom and  it does look strange in the vertical mode.

Karl
EOS R6 V RF20-50mm F4 L IS USM PZ Lens Kit
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