The Lo error message shows up occasionally. It isn’t an error message, so much as a warning, of an exposure anomaly. It never occurs in the manual mode, since the camera assumes that you know what you’re doing. You’ll see it occasionally in Aperture Priority, but mostly in Shutter Priority. Let’s explore this.
Let’s determine the proper exposure using the Sunny Sixteen Rule. Let’s start with an ISO setting of 125, just to make things simple. Under the requisite sunny conditions, the rule dictates the base exposure, shaded in yellow. I’ve added 8 additional shutter/aperture combinations that will provide an identical exposure.
F 2
|
F 2.8
|
F 4
|
F 5.6
|
F 8
|
F 11
|
F 16
|
F 22
|
F 32
|
1/8000
|
1/4000
|
1/2000
|
1/1000
|
1/500
|
1/250
|
1/125
|
1/60
|
1/30
|
Assuming that the light remains constant, I could set the shutter speed to 1/125 and the camera would select F 16 as the proper aperture. If I set the shutter speed to 1/250, the camera would select F11. If you selected a shutter speed of 1/2000, the camera would select F 4. You can see the combination shaded in red.
F 2
|
F 2.8
|
F 4
|
F 5.6
|
F 8
|
F 11
|
F 16
|
F 22
|
F 32
|
1/8000
|
1/4000
|
1/2000
|
1/1000
|
1/500
|
1/250
|
1/125
|
1/60
|
1/30
|
Lo
|
Lo
|
Lo
|
F 5.6
|
F 8
|
F 11
|
F 16
|
F 22
|
F 32
|
1/8000
|
1/4000
|
1/2000
|
1/1000
|
1/500
|
1/250
|
1/125
|
1/60
|
1/30
|
The Lo message will appear from time to time. It's just a reminder that sometimes the camera DOES know best!
By the way, you'll also get it if you leave the lens cap on.
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