I am the happy owner of a Fuji gx 680 III and I have an extra 220 cassette.
I am wondering if it is possible to use a 120 film in this cassette or not ?
I didn't manage to find any reliable information about this.
A cassette would be an enclosed container. Type 120 and type 220 film are just wound on a spool, self-enclosed by their backing paper resp. leader paper.
EDIT: now I realized that you refer to the film magazine or back. That part of ther camera.
Without having such a magazine, there are basically two issues I would think of.
-) pressure plate (thickness of film channel/tension)
-) frame spacing / frame counter (measured by advance/ by spool rotation)
One could check the residual way the spring loading of the pressure plate yields without any film and with bare and paper-backed film and compare these.
But more telling would be just to run a film through and look for scratching on the base- and emulsion side. Best even compared to a type 220 film tun through. A uniform exposure for neutral density might reveal any pressure induced. The same time c
The same goes for the advance. One might not even need to process a film for this but mark the frames from within the image aperture. The same time checking what the frame counter indicates.
Yes, I was talking about a film insert.
I use a IIIn back, I thought about pressure plate, as 220 and 120 films doesn't have the same thickness (tell me if I am wrong...)
So the best way seems to try, and look a the film after process.
Any Gx 680 owner advice ?
Thank you !
Yes, but the wear on the insert may be more important than the stress on the 120 film if the OP also shoots 220 C41 and requires the insert for that purpose.
The GX680III mag knows which insert is inside and loads and winds on accordingly (120 or 220). Lead in and spacing may be off and when you shoot off your 9 frames; you will probably have to shoot a few more blanks to fool it into winding on to the end.