Antje, the film loader for sheet film onto the 2509 reels is really nice to use, compared to straight hand loading.
I mentioned the snow to the missus, she doesn't miss it, nice to look at, but cold to live with. We'll be in Germany at the end of December through to almost mid January, so I believe there is a reasonable chance of seeing the white cold stuff.
Barry, I always develop film, any type, on the slow speed setting, never use a pre-wash and never have processing problems. In fact today I developed 6 rolls of 35mm film I recently found whilst looking for a camera. Turns out the film was 1984 and covers the era from February to July. Ilford HP5 Safety Film, would you believe, been stored in it's bulk loaded cassettes and then inside a shoebox. Found a picture of myself taken in March 84, my hair was a different colour back then.
I've developed thousands of rolls in the CPE2 and apart form the aforementioned processing problem, I have never had any troubles with density evenness using the slow speed setting for all films. The later model CPE2 machines only have one speed, faster than the slow speed, but I believe slightly slower than the fast speed on my machine, 1 revolution per minute slower from memory.
The ceramic insulator thingys started to come adrift about 15 years ago, I haven't a clue what it was I used, but it worked and is white and waterproof
Lee, although I have heard anecdotal stuff regarding the slow speed for film and the fast speed for paper, I have never seen that written anywhere by Jobo. I have my original hand book and other stuff that came with my unit when new, they do not mention this at all.
My belief, and it is my belief only after some thinking about rotary processing and why would a smart Teutonic company put two speeds on their Color Process Entwicklung (CPE) machine. Entwicklung means to develop, (Antje, I did know that word).
After some time pondering this I came to the conclusion that as there were two drum diameter sizes, they required two speeds to maintain the edge speed. Virtually all films in the CPE2 are processed in the smaller 1500 drums, with paper generally processed in the larger 2800 drums.
Now that is a generalisation, but, by and large, when these smallest Jobo units were being sold new, the amateurs purchasing them, used them this way.
Professional users processing large amounts of film and sheet films, used the professional and much larger Color Process Professional (CPP) machines. The larger professional units have different speed settings for different sized drums.
My conclusion a couple of decades ago was that my two speed CPE2 was designed to run the small 1500 tanks at the slow speed and the 2800 tanks at the faster setting. This then gave me the same approximate external drum speed, meaning that the internal liquid covered the sensitive material at approximately the same rate, regardless of the drum diameter size.
Having said that, I still rotate on the slower speed for my sheet film in the larger 2800 drum with superb results.
For a few years in the eighties I developed Kodak 4x5 Color Print Film for a local professional photographer. Color Print film was a film designed to make colour corrected slides from C41 colour negative film, which in turn was then used for magazine or colour brochure printing.
I processed around 20 sheets a month and the only errors I had were either exposure (under the enlarger) or incorrect colour head settings in the enlarger.
Basically, I found that the slow speed setting worked for myself with film, so I haven't changed from that.
You really have to find something that works for you, then stick with it.
Mick.