John,
Would you consider a simple homemade slosher? See my earlier (there was a url link here which no longer exists) (#6)
This looks good indeed.
John,
Would you consider a simple homemade slosher? See my earlier (there was a url link here which no longer exists) (#6)
Yea, I got that, 1L is my max, alas... Maybe I'll design my own better one and market it
It seems to me if the tolerances on the mod 54 or better, this wouldn't be an issue, the film would stay put and not shimmy back-and-forth, but there's at least a millimeter or two of space on the top and bottom for the film to shift up-and-down, I don't understand why there's so much space. Also if instead of having the film be with teeth, if they were actually tracks, the film would stay more still, and be less prone to scratching in the first place.
I come from a long line of engineers, I'm the first in 4 generations to not be one by trade, but it still is ingrained in me, and it just drives me nuts that something better couldn't have been designed its so simple I don't understand, if I only had the money, I would design it myself and patent it.
I think I'd back the Jobo Engineers' skills, experience and knowledge over a Layman's every day of the year.
The tolerances you refer to are to allow fluid movement over the whole film so as to prevent edge markings and/or surge marks.
Stone:
X-Tol easily lasts 6 months once mixed, and it is easy to mix. Past that, it is a bit iffy, but it is cheap, so if you need to toss it after 6 months, you are probably wasting between 3 and 7 dollars.
When you mix it up first time, you divide the 5 litres into a bottle used for working solution and bottle(s) for replenishment. I'm currently using a 1.25 litre bottle for my working solution.
You only need to replenish it a minimum of once a week, and you do that by just dumping 70 ml from your working solution and adding 70 ml from your replenishing solution - which comes from the same initial 5 litre batch. You only need to do this during any week when you don't develop film.
If you actually develop film during that week, you replenish after each development @ 70 ml per 120 roll or equivalent (120 = 135-36 = four 4x5 sheets). You dump the appropriate amount of replenishing solution into your bottle while the film is developing, and than pour the developer back into the bottle, with the excess being discarded.
Your first batch will give you about fifty 120 rolls (or fifty 135-36 rolls, or 200 4x5 sheets). With subsequent batches, you continue to use the same bottle of working solution, while the newly mixed batch can be conveniently split between five one litre bottles.
It's not that they can't do it, it's just that it's not profitable![]()
However I MAY be getting a special gift soon that would make me ... buy a JOBO tank anyway...
Strange comment, given they do do it, and that they're still doing it despite your claim that it's not profitable.
Seems altruism isn't dead...
This is going off topic again but:
There is no mix and match between any paterson and Jobo tanks, unfortunately. That would have been a cool thing, but just does not work, in any direction.
2520 tanks "only" need 1.25l, not 1.5l. Jobo make a 2L bottle, and other makes of shrink bottles that hold more then 1L are out there and plenty cheap.
If you like your dev process, there is no need to change it, just mix 1.25L of dev and do you think as you would have with any other tank. The Jobo 2509n has no risk of sheets being scratched, or become dislodged or anything else for that matter.
Then stop/fix with tiny amounts of chemistry (300-500ml) while rotating, or use 1.25L for inversion.
The Jobo 2500 tank system for sheet film processinf is a time and result proven system that works for many folks around the globe, most of whom do not have a Jobo processor.
NO THEY DONT not for the hand processing tanks ... Sheesh!
*facepalm* YES, THEY DO for hand processing tanks. Search for Jobo 2401. Sheesh!
It strikes me that you're the only one complaining about this. Perhaps it's YOUR processing paradigm that should be questioned, not Jobo's offerings... A case of the tail trying to wag the dog perhaps?
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