Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/07/02
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On Fri, 2004-07-02 at 16:13, TTAbrahams@aol.com wrote: > Feli, > I bulkload odd films like movie-tock (Super XX, Agfapan 250 and Tech-Pan). > > Rather than use a bulk loader I go into the darkroom and just unwind the > film > out of the can, extend my arms fully and chop of the film. This gives me > about > 37-38 exposures per strip - roughly 67-68 inches of film. I use the Leica > IXMOO cassettes - all metal and the lock on the regular baseplate (older > type) > will open the cassette and there is no problem with scratches as the > opening is > big enough (8mm) to let the film clear the edges. You do need to cut a > sharp > V-shaped end for the spool on these - after a while you get the hang of it > and > there is less bleeding from fingertips "Oh, that was not the film, that > was a > finger!". The old Leica template, ABLOON, had a nice "shaper" for that and > I > simply made my own from a piece of brass plate. I was thinking about getting the old Leica cassettes and winder. I don't have a darkroom, but a large Harrison/Harrison film changing/loading bag that should work like a charm. They also make a really nice film changing "tent". http://www.studiodepot.com/store/index.cgi?cmd=view_item&parent=1001-1185&id=3103 > For general films like TX and ACROS I use pre-loaded stock. Quicker and > easier and the IXMOO cassettes are difficult to explain to Airport > Security > Guards. It has three different components, an outside shell, an inside > shell and a > center spool - all are made from metal and the weight is noticeable and on > the > X-ray it looks quite suspicious. It is a very complex piece, springs and > catches galore and you better get some reject film to try with first. Yes, I was a bit worried about the extra weight of the IXMOO cassettes. They also look a little like the old fuses from a M42 Tellermine... ;-) > The movie-stock is interesting - at the moment I am shooting Super XX and > rating it at 250. Great film - not as fine grained as Tri-X but with an > extended > mid tone, virtually no "shoulder" tons of details in the highlight areas. > If > you treat it like Tri-X and cut the time by 10-15% (D76 1:1 at 8,5 > minutes) > you are in the ballpark. I still have a 100 ft roll of Panatomic-X in my > freezer that I will use up this summer. I might need to add some Kodak > Anti-Fog > tablets to the developer, but even after 20+ years it should give me good > negatives. SuperXX (5222) is terrific. I recently shot a short film with it. If I remember correctly we rated it at about 200 or 250 and projected it looks absolutely stellar! Highlight detail is quite amazing. Kodak recommends KODAK D-96, for processing.I seem to remember them actually selling this in a reasonably sized bottle...I wonder how different D96 is from D76.. http://www.kodak.com/US/en/motion/products/bw/5222.jhtml?id=0.1.4.4.8.4&lc=en http://www.kodak.com/US/en/motion/products/bw/tech5222.jhtml?id=0.1.4.4.8.4.4&lc=en#processing Kodak also sells a motion picture stock called PLUS-X (5231). Does anyone know if it is the same as the still film? http://www.kodak.com/US/en/motion/products/bw/5231.jhtml?id=0.1.4.4.8.6&lc=en http://www.kodak.com/US/en/motion/products/bw/tech5231.jhtml?id=0.1.4.4.8.6.4&lc=en > You can usually find the Leica cassettes at swap-meet for reasonable > prices, but beware, the only ones that work on the M's are the ones with > the chrome > "knobs" on them. The ones with black paint knobs work on screw-mount > bodies, > but not on the M's as they are 2mm taller. The IXMOO (chrome knob) will > work > on both screw and M-mounts. thanks for the info. > Movie-stock comes in 400ft cans and I usually get about 75-79 rolls out of > one can > and I keep 80 of these cassettes around for that. A couple of hours work > to load them >all and then you can shoot to your hearts content. They are heavy though >and ? dozen >in your pocket makes you list noticeably! They are absolutely light tight >and never a >scratch. They are also great for short pieces of film - testing a developer >or a lens. I think I may still have some shortends of SuperXX buried in the bottom of my freezer... Feli > Tom A > -------------------------- > Tom Abrahamsson > Vancouver, BC > Canada