pentaxuser
Member
I have recently obtained a Watson bulk loader and several Barfen re-usable cassettes. They differ from the Jessops cassettes I have in that the inner spool has a half inch slot in the middle in which there is a white plastic insert that can be pushed out.
I think that you can cut the middle of the film leader to fit the slot and then push the white insert back in to hold the film. This makes it like commercial cassettes I have examined and avoids the need to tape the film to the outside of the spool.
However given the need to be sure that the film, if inserted this way, will be firmly held, I should be grateful if any one with experience of Barfen cassettes or others of a similar construction can comment on my assumption and provide advice.
As Jessops cassettes seem to have abandoned the practice of providing this central slot, it does make me wonder if the Barfen slot was an idea that was better in theory than practice and abandoned for that reason. On the other hand it may simply be that the Jessops construction is easier and cheaper to manufacture.
I now know that the cassettes were part of a photographic club that disbanded about 20 years ago so the cassettes are at least that old and may simply represent better construction that became the victim of the cost cutters as so many things have in the last 20 years.
Thanks
pentaxuser
I think that you can cut the middle of the film leader to fit the slot and then push the white insert back in to hold the film. This makes it like commercial cassettes I have examined and avoids the need to tape the film to the outside of the spool.
However given the need to be sure that the film, if inserted this way, will be firmly held, I should be grateful if any one with experience of Barfen cassettes or others of a similar construction can comment on my assumption and provide advice.
As Jessops cassettes seem to have abandoned the practice of providing this central slot, it does make me wonder if the Barfen slot was an idea that was better in theory than practice and abandoned for that reason. On the other hand it may simply be that the Jessops construction is easier and cheaper to manufacture.
I now know that the cassettes were part of a photographic club that disbanded about 20 years ago so the cassettes are at least that old and may simply represent better construction that became the victim of the cost cutters as so many things have in the last 20 years.
Thanks
pentaxuser