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First, thanks for your advice I'm new to big enlargers and I've a lot to learn.
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Yes... I found that 30x40cm and up the Drytec flattering is perfect with FB papers I tested, for smaller papers it is more challenging and I have to improve. Drying drums are the perfection but the vacuum press makes 1m2 of prints in a single 5min cycle, with little manpower. It makes 7000 kg force from vacuum at the temperature you want, but still as the fibers are dry they don't slide well between them, I guess the effect of water is great, it provides an internal lubrication to allow internal displacements of fibers that would be permanent after drying, for this reason for small prints I'm to experiment by spraying distilled watter, to get a bit the "vapour Iron" effect.
We use a DIY low noise powerful HEPA class recirculation filter to remove all dust in the darkroom. Also we are to install and osmosis filter to also make always a last rinse with purified water.
Yeah, a superb print may deserve that finishing !
siliconed film lasts way more than siliconed paper, salesman says x10
Drytec Flobond is "heat activated, but permanent and neutral, not cheap sadly but I guess that it not fails, still I'm starting in mounting and I know that many pitfalls can be there, even seasoned professionals have pitfalls in that so a novice is a perfect candidate for pitfalls
Float mounting would also be nice, but I guess that it requires a very refined job.
Well, LAPAL is intended for this and for other things, IMO. It is required for a projector lamp if the lens is not wide open and etc, but it also is used to easily modify the degree of diffusion. I agree, we can diffuse in other places in the optic path, in the condensers like you say, but also remakably when using a diffuser in the masking sandwich we get a perfect diffusion yet and any previous diffusion only decreases light power, as I'm to rely a lot in masking I would prefer a true condenser in what the diffusion can be adjustable in the filter drawer when needed.
Perhaps diffusing in the drawer or in the conderser delivers a different nature, to avoid Callier while retaining the condenser footprint perhaps doing it in the drawer would be interesting.
Yes... I made a flat panel that substitues a condenser... it works, we get a diffuser enlarger... but finally I epoxy glued a mast in a E27 cask with a 100W rgb LED, illuminating a 120mm dome salvaged form a LED bub, tilted 90º and pointing to the window, in that way it presents a perfect disc, and no modification in the 138 head was necessary, beyond a hole for the new cabling.
I like using a bulb because it allows to adjust fall-off, that can also be discentered off-axis, being condenser, 100w LEDs deliver an insane amount of light for potential murals, but 200w it would be also nice.
For projecting on the easel a regular 18W LED bulb is mostly enough with condensers, projecting to the wall is another thing.
You have good lenses !
Mine (old Rodagons 210/240 ) require stopping a bit more
. F/8- or 11 . I've tested that by projecting an USAF 1951 glass slide on the dslr sensor.
One thing is optimal performance in the center and another thing in the corners, specially for big prints. Many prints have irrelevant things in the corners, but IMO those that require a good job in the corners perhaps require one click more.
The N was only made until 150mm, for 5x7 and 8x10 the G is the single Rodenstock to get one or two stops more of light for big prints and still working great, but not cheap.
For FB I'm limited by the HPG260, this is 47x35"
When I mentioned the N/G I was quoting a post about big print crafting seen in youtube, saying that the high efficience of a condenser illumination would require less a fast/good enlarging lens for monster prints, I guess this is right.
I agree with you that a condenser would be nasty for big prints if negative has dirt/scratches etc, so a clean/flawless processing is required, but an intermediate solution is possible, a semi-diffusion may be the good compromise, while it removes most of the Callier it conserves most of the power. Fortunatey today we have LEDs allowing a diffuser a higher output for big projections, with lower reheating in the head and in the negative. At the end the G glasses were sold to people specialized in murals having a diffuser machine (many Aristo, I guess) to get more light, those were the firsts that moved to Lambdas...
I don't think that condenser is better or worse than diffusion, but they are a bit different... but nothing better that being able to adjust diffusion, at least to learn what one likes.
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First, thanks for your advice I'm new to big enlargers and I've a lot to learn.
***************
What I was getting at is that while it definitely flattens the paper very well, it doesn't do it as well as two bristol boards in a traditional dry mount press - which in its turn isn't as perfect as the drum-skin flat finish of a print dried taped under tension. The differences are, in the bigger picture, pretty small, but they are there & you have to pick & choose the compromises you are prepared to live with.
Yes... I found that 30x40cm and up the Drytec flattering is perfect with FB papers I tested, for smaller papers it is more challenging and I have to improve. Drying drums are the perfection but the vacuum press makes 1m2 of prints in a single 5min cycle, with little manpower. It makes 7000 kg force from vacuum at the temperature you want, but still as the fibers are dry they don't slide well between them, I guess the effect of water is great, it provides an internal lubrication to allow internal displacements of fibers that would be permanent after drying, for this reason for small prints I'm to experiment by spraying distilled watter, to get a bit the "vapour Iron" effect.
More of a headache is the willingness of the silicone film to pick up all sorts of marks & microscopic debris & deboss them into the face of the print - cutting a new piece of film for every print gets old (and expensive) fast, but if you want a perfect finish, it's often necessary.
We use a DIY low noise powerful HEPA class recirculation filter to remove all dust in the darkroom. Also we are to install and osmosis filter to also make always a last rinse with purified water.
silicone film, but if you want a perfect finish, it's often necessary.
Yeah, a superb print may deserve that finishing !
siliconed film lasts way more than siliconed paper, salesman says x10
I use the permanent bond, neutral pH tissue - mainly because the heat de-bondable stuff doesn't have the best reputation for staying stuck & if a conservator really needs to de-bond the print, it can be done with solvents. If extreme archival permanence is necessary, I don't dry mount, I much prefer to use properly archival, fully reversible methods like float mounting etc.
Drytec Flobond is "heat activated, but permanent and neutral, not cheap sadly but I guess that it not fails, still I'm starting in mounting and I know that many pitfalls can be there, even seasoned professionals have pitfalls in that so a novice is a perfect candidate for pitfalls

Float mounting would also be nice, but I guess that it requires a very refined job.
the LAPAL is intended to diffuse a projector bulb (e.g. something like this Philips 375E) to deliver about the same coverage
Well, LAPAL is intended for this and for other things, IMO. It is required for a projector lamp if the lens is not wide open and etc, but it also is used to easily modify the degree of diffusion. I agree, we can diffuse in other places in the optic path, in the condensers like you say, but also remakably when using a diffuser in the masking sandwich we get a perfect diffusion yet and any previous diffusion only decreases light power, as I'm to rely a lot in masking I would prefer a true condenser in what the diffusion can be adjustable in the filter drawer when needed.
Perhaps diffusing in the drawer or in the conderser delivers a different nature, to avoid Callier while retaining the condenser footprint perhaps doing it in the drawer would be interesting.
Essentially the system is a semi-focused beam using a diffused opal bulb & clear condensers - if I were to design an LED system to allow you to continue to use the condensers, I'd make a diffused flat panel that matches the aperture hole between lamp box & mirror box - more importantly it eliminates the compromise Durst had to adopt in the late 1940's/ early 1950's to get even illumination. You could probably fabricate something that could drop in to the same slot as the filter holder. If I were going to dedicate the head to mural work, I'd seriously consider getting 200w of LED into the head.
Yes... I made a flat panel that substitues a condenser... it works, we get a diffuser enlarger... but finally I epoxy glued a mast in a E27 cask with a 100W rgb LED, illuminating a 120mm dome salvaged form a LED bub, tilted 90º and pointing to the window, in that way it presents a perfect disc, and no modification in the 138 head was necessary, beyond a hole for the new cabling.
I like using a bulb because it allows to adjust fall-off, that can also be discentered off-axis, being condenser, 100w LEDs deliver an insane amount of light for potential murals, but 200w it would be also nice.
For projecting on the easel a regular 18W LED bulb is mostly enough with condensers, projecting to the wall is another thing.
Most current enlarging lenses (depending on max aperture) hit optimal performance at f4.7-8 - going below that in a sharpness critical environment (like mural printing) becomes unpleasantly obvious rather quickly. Rodagon-G's are great for 135 & 120 & aren't necessary for larger formats unless you are going to truly extreme scales - do you need to go bigger than 40x50" or 48x60" - or are you writing about hypotheticals?
You have good lenses !
Mine (old Rodagons 210/240 ) require stopping a bit more

One thing is optimal performance in the center and another thing in the corners, specially for big prints. Many prints have irrelevant things in the corners, but IMO those that require a good job in the corners perhaps require one click more.
Rodagon-G's are great for 135 & 120 & aren't necessary for larger formats unless you are going to truly extreme scales -
The N was only made until 150mm, for 5x7 and 8x10 the G is the single Rodenstock to get one or two stops more of light for big prints and still working great, but not cheap.
do you need to go bigger than 40x50" or 48x60" - or are you writing about hypotheticals?
For FB I'm limited by the HPG260, this is 47x35"
When I mentioned the N/G I was quoting a post about big print crafting seen in youtube, saying that the high efficience of a condenser illumination would require less a fast/good enlarging lens for monster prints, I guess this is right.
I agree with you that a condenser would be nasty for big prints if negative has dirt/scratches etc, so a clean/flawless processing is required, but an intermediate solution is possible, a semi-diffusion may be the good compromise, while it removes most of the Callier it conserves most of the power. Fortunatey today we have LEDs allowing a diffuser a higher output for big projections, with lower reheating in the head and in the negative. At the end the G glasses were sold to people specialized in murals having a diffuser machine (many Aristo, I guess) to get more light, those were the firsts that moved to Lambdas...
I don't think that condenser is better or worse than diffusion, but they are a bit different... but nothing better that being able to adjust diffusion, at least to learn what one likes.
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