silvergelatin
Member
Wanted to see if anyone has any tricks for alignment of a copy stand film scanning rig, beyond the usual “mirror trick”.
I have a Negative Supply Pro 35 carrier, and am finding that my alignment is slightly off if I put the mirror on top of the carrier. I am using a scientific supply front surface mirror that does not move the lens image when rotated, so that’s not the issue. I tried all sorts of tests with rotating lenses and rotating the carrier, etc, and have determined that the top of the carrier simply is not parallel to the film. I am verifying the alignment by shooting Vlad’s Test Target after the mirror step.
So next I tried running two pieces of thick Ilford film into the carrier sandwiched together to create a stable base for another little 20mm laser mirror I picked up, and it was much, much closer. I plan to try using a thin metal shim material next, as it should be flexible enough to slip into the S channel, but rigid enough for supporting the mirror without sag. But worst case scenario, the film sandwich trick is usable, if slightly awkward.
I wanted to open this up to get other ideas, though. Has anyone been down this rabbit hole and have any insight?
I was hoping to use the Focus Meter feature in Capture One, but my A7RII live view feed just isn’t clean enough for that to work. Has anyone used that feature or other software with a newer camera (with better live feed tethering) like the A7RIV?
I have a Negative Supply Pro 35 carrier, and am finding that my alignment is slightly off if I put the mirror on top of the carrier. I am using a scientific supply front surface mirror that does not move the lens image when rotated, so that’s not the issue. I tried all sorts of tests with rotating lenses and rotating the carrier, etc, and have determined that the top of the carrier simply is not parallel to the film. I am verifying the alignment by shooting Vlad’s Test Target after the mirror step.
So next I tried running two pieces of thick Ilford film into the carrier sandwiched together to create a stable base for another little 20mm laser mirror I picked up, and it was much, much closer. I plan to try using a thin metal shim material next, as it should be flexible enough to slip into the S channel, but rigid enough for supporting the mirror without sag. But worst case scenario, the film sandwich trick is usable, if slightly awkward.
I wanted to open this up to get other ideas, though. Has anyone been down this rabbit hole and have any insight?
I was hoping to use the Focus Meter feature in Capture One, but my A7RII live view feed just isn’t clean enough for that to work. Has anyone used that feature or other software with a newer camera (with better live feed tethering) like the A7RIV?
