If you made something with such an intense UV light source, it would probably be pretty bad for your eyes =O
The fear of burning your retina with a grain focuser is probably valid. But you could focus with blue light to get you in the ballpark and at the very worst, what, a small focus shift?
I bet a physicist could tell us, but would UV focus shift as badly as IR? It seems that there might be less refraction with the higher frequency of UV light. I dont know though... just speculating.
I prefer the free, nuclear fusion orb. AKA the sun. Way easier for simpletons like me to use. Maybe I can Jerry-rig a tanning bed into a UV printing box?
I think the negative "being in the way of the light source" is not a problem at the plane of focus. It's just like a catadioptric mirror lens; the out of focus areas will show evidence of that void in the form of circular bokeh. But, on the plane of focus a full image is formed and since a negative is flat, a respectable image should result.
Somebody correct me if I'm wrong, but I think that's the gist of it.
Enough theorising already!
The packs of LEDs are on their way.
Well.... someone had to have a go
Sure but just bear in mind that what's best suited for the skin is probably not best suited for your emulsionThe sunbed plastics probably block some bands you'd like to expose with. But your basic, clear PMMA acrylics (perspex / plexiglas) are transparent way down past common glass.
Built a UV box with like 15 UV "blacklight" tubes from home Depot. Wayyyyy slow. Then I got the Nu Arc. Life got better.
Steve, forgive my Yankee ignorance, what is "architrave"?
What I'm wondering is this... My maths skills aren't good enough for me to work it out - but I've got a hunch that if you dispensed with the scanning and just enlarged the beam with a lens (excluding lens losses) so that it covered the negative - the exposure might be the same.
Well, the variable to sort out is the raster rate, right? When rastering, you can "dwell" at a point as long as you like. So unless you specify that dwell time, we can't compare the exposures.
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