Bob Carnie
Subscriber
Thanks Bob,
I was considering mounting the enlarger in a fixed position, and having a movable easel. Easy repeatable registration will be the biggest problem, if I do that. It may work better with my space. I'm mainly trying to avoid having to fabricate a floor mounted track. The largest prints I plan to make would have a max of 40" inches on the short side (40x60 for instance), so I was thinking wallpaper trays if I can find them over 40" or if not, something along those lines, either constructed, or purchased, and a two man operation for development.
Your facility sounds incredible.
Jason
A movable easel will work quite nicely , You may want to consider a vertical setup,and stepping up to change filters bla bla bla, There was this guy in Canada who cut a hole through a second floor and projected down to make massive prints.
The floor track is not hard if you have room and will allow you to move the enlarger to the wall if you are doing other things.
I went to a plastic welder, any enviornmental silver recovery company in your area will know a dude who can plastic weld.
then make the trays to your size.. 46inches wide by 12inches bottom/deep on the inside measurment. Rolling the prints through a series of these trays is a piece of cake, make sure you wear gloves, longer than normal dev time, and consistant rolling.
Where you are going to find problems is toning, I had to make large trays for this ,, once again the plastic welder dude, they need not be as deep but should be able to hold a 40x60 inch print. you will need two.
Otherwise I would stick to dev, stop, fix, fix hypoclear and 1:20 selenium tone then final wash as your workflow.
Wash is done by the fill and dump method and quite frankly is a backbreaker and the biggest pain in the ass in the whole workflow.
I commissioned the plastic welder to make me a vertical slot washer.. 48Inches x 74Inches with six slotts .. I think it holds over 110 gallons of water.
This sucker is setting me back $5000 but we do a lot of murals here and will save a lot of hours in the long run.
BTW if you make the trays as I suggested it really is a one man operation, just need strong wrists. *I got mine from playing hockey, and other things not needed to be mentioned.*
Bob