rmolson
Member
Fogged film update
I have been pursuing the problem of what is fogging my 120 HP-5 on the ends and sides and into the image area. Initially I eliminated the over head fluorescents lights by not turning them on at least 12 hours before loading any reels. That helped but did not completely stop the fog, just made it less. I had already eliminated the magazines of my Bronica SQa and even got a new one, to no avail. One day I had two different rolls on my light table and noticed the fog was on the left side of the film on one roll and on the right side of the other .whoa!
That ruled out the camera and magazines pretty well .Sometimes the taped end of the roll gives me trouble so I would start from the tail end and the fog followed that pattern. This lead to a not earth shaking conclusion that the fog is occurring somewhere in the darkroom. I have a very tiny darkroom and then I looked at my inspection light. A little, I thought, night light with a nice diffuser for checking negatives while printing. Popped the diffuser and there was a tiny little powerful fluorescent tube complete with after glow and all. Turned that off and still had fog on the next roll. Now I am getting desperate. My set up is an enlarger with a relatively new Time O Lite with an illuminated dial ( it glows in the dark) about 2 feet away from where I load reels. Surely that would not fog film? Got my Luna Pro SBC, turned on the overheads for few minutes and then went dark and I got a reading off the face of the dial!!!! Whod have thunk?.
Now I am loading in a changing bag until I can figure out how to measure UV after glow!, or changing all the lights over to incandescent and masking the dials on timers .
Which may be a problem in itself in the near future, as they are pushing fluorescent lights for everything.
The up side of it is now that I have extra magazines I can do normal, normal plus, and a normal minus exposure and development with roll film.
I have been pursuing the problem of what is fogging my 120 HP-5 on the ends and sides and into the image area. Initially I eliminated the over head fluorescents lights by not turning them on at least 12 hours before loading any reels. That helped but did not completely stop the fog, just made it less. I had already eliminated the magazines of my Bronica SQa and even got a new one, to no avail. One day I had two different rolls on my light table and noticed the fog was on the left side of the film on one roll and on the right side of the other .whoa!
That ruled out the camera and magazines pretty well .Sometimes the taped end of the roll gives me trouble so I would start from the tail end and the fog followed that pattern. This lead to a not earth shaking conclusion that the fog is occurring somewhere in the darkroom. I have a very tiny darkroom and then I looked at my inspection light. A little, I thought, night light with a nice diffuser for checking negatives while printing. Popped the diffuser and there was a tiny little powerful fluorescent tube complete with after glow and all. Turned that off and still had fog on the next roll. Now I am getting desperate. My set up is an enlarger with a relatively new Time O Lite with an illuminated dial ( it glows in the dark) about 2 feet away from where I load reels. Surely that would not fog film? Got my Luna Pro SBC, turned on the overheads for few minutes and then went dark and I got a reading off the face of the dial!!!! Whod have thunk?.
Now I am loading in a changing bag until I can figure out how to measure UV after glow!, or changing all the lights over to incandescent and masking the dials on timers .
Which may be a problem in itself in the near future, as they are pushing fluorescent lights for everything.
The up side of it is now that I have extra magazines I can do normal, normal plus, and a normal minus exposure and development with roll film.