ah ah, You can do double exposures with the OM-1(n), works well too.
OM-1(n)
1) Turn the rewind crank until resistance is felt to take up any slack
in the film roll.
2) Take the first exposure.
3) Turn the rewind knob to "rewind".
4) Operate the film advance lever.
5) Reset the rewind knob.
6) Take the second exposure.
OM2000.
1) Turn the rewind crank until resistance is felt to take up any slack
in the film roll.
2) Take the first exposure.
3) Push the multi-exposure lever forward.
4) Operate film advance lever.
5) Take second exposure.
Appears to me it is a case of lever vs knob.
-Charles Packard
gries wrote:
>
> ah, that might have the advantage of data back, but no double exposure
> lever - a must for mixed lighting conditions!
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Gary Edwards <garyetx@xxxxxxxx>
> To: <olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Sent: Monday, November 20, 2000 7:49 PM
> Subject: Re: [OM] Re: OM-2000
>
> > Gries,
> >
> > May I humbly suggest that for your work, as you describe it, an OM-1N
> would
> > be more suited - and then you could have a data back and mirror lockup.
> >
> > Gary Edwards
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