01af wrote:
deaton wrote:
The filter was supposed to be circular, but who knows. Is there any way to tell?
Sure---and it's easy. Look through the filter into a mirror at the filter's mirror image. Flip the filter back and forth so you'd look through it once from the front side and then from the back side. With a linear polarizer, the filter's mirror image as seen through the filter won't change; the filter always will look grey. With a circular polarizer, the filter's mirror image will change from grey to pitch-black when flipping it.
When using a linear polarizer on a camera which needs circular polarizers then over-exposure would be the typical thing to happen. And the Sony A350 does need circular polarizers ... as all DSLR cameras do.
-- Olaf
Your test works perfectly, and it did what you said. I even compared it with a Hoya polarizer which does indeed turn black. It is definitely a linear polarizer! What a piece of junk! I have bought cheap polarizers before and they always worked although I suspect that their coatings were not very good. I guess its off to the photo store to buy a name brand polarizer and to spend the money I suppose I should have spent to start with.
Thank you to everybody for your help!
Although I suspected it was somehow the polarizer, it did not occur to me that I had been sold a linear polarizer (mail order from an Amazon associated dealer).