In aperture priority mode, the green needle points to 'A' instead of a shutter speed, and the black needle points to the automatically selected shutter speed, including intermediate shutter speeds of course. The EL is the first Nikon body to use the use the new type of exposure meter display in the viewfinder, which became very popular and continued to be used virtually unchanged all the way through the final body in the later FM line, the FM3A! In manual exposure mode, a green needle points to the selected shutter speed on the left side of the viewfinder you adjust the aperture ring and/or shutter speed dial until the position of the green needle coincides with the position of the black exposure meter needle. For users of Nikon bodies of that generation, attaching lenses to the camera body this way is second nature. The EL is from the same generation as the Nikkormat FT2, and links the lens to the camera's exposure meter by slipping the aperture ring claw on the lens onto the metering pin around the lens mount. Kung saan-saan ka pa naghahanap, nadito lang naman ako. Of course, if you know how to use the camera, you can easily implement exposure compensation by just changing the selected film speed. Kung sinu-sino pa ang tinatawagan mo, nandito lang naman ako.
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