kb244
Member
So as we're packing up the store (yes the "Camera Center" I work in is finally closing it's doors, tho will try to stay online), I came across one of the items buried in the basement and decided to buy it primarily cuz of the aesthetics (it'll be prettier when I clean most the dust off the outside) but would also allow me a compact lil unit to do some 4x5 contact printing when I didn't want to have to worry about a light source to place off a typical contact frame.
In any case I replaced the two 100W household bulbs with two 27W (equiv to 100W) daylight balanced florescent bulbs. Then I goto plug it in... oddly enough the switch is a direct on/off type of switch, well when I turn it on one of the bulbs lights up, if I turn it off then back on the other might turn on or the first one will light up again. Looking again I noticed that whatever bulb didn't come on looks like it's trying to come on, as if the path of wiring has not allowed the second bulb enough "juice" so to speak.
issue 1 - wiring
Now I'm assuming though since its all Alternating current that it should be fine in parrallel with each other. Right now its going from the wall... connects to the red bulb, which also connects a wire to one of the white bulbs on the same contact. from the one white bulb, it goes to another white bulb, then that one white bulb goes to the rocker switch, then from the rocker switch goes to the other contact on the red bulb area. The red bulb then connects into a push switch which then leads back out to the AC current.
So basically push button turns on/off the whole unit which is connected thru the red bulb, and the white bulbs piggy back off the contacts on the red bulb being interrupted by a rocker switch.
Now by design I think making one bulb follow the last is probably not the best way to do it, and that instead I should perhaps make a common lead to all the bulbs on one end, but then run then one after the other on the other line. (ie: they all directly connect to 1 wire, but run one after the other on the other wire). So basically looking for confirmation on rewiring.
issue 2 - diffusion
Right now the lid has a small 5x7 cut of frosted glass separated by about an inch from a sheet of clear glass. what I want to do is put four pegs in the corner down near the bulbs and drop in a larger peice of frosted glass in hoping of diffusing the light even further before hitting the negative. Also because I'm using lower wattage (27W each) bulbs and duration is not constant I could also maybe use a solid white lenoleum or some other kind of plastic/polymer block, kinda like what you see on those cold heads on enlargers.
Advice on this?
Pictures
In any case I replaced the two 100W household bulbs with two 27W (equiv to 100W) daylight balanced florescent bulbs. Then I goto plug it in... oddly enough the switch is a direct on/off type of switch, well when I turn it on one of the bulbs lights up, if I turn it off then back on the other might turn on or the first one will light up again. Looking again I noticed that whatever bulb didn't come on looks like it's trying to come on, as if the path of wiring has not allowed the second bulb enough "juice" so to speak.
issue 1 - wiring
Now I'm assuming though since its all Alternating current that it should be fine in parrallel with each other. Right now its going from the wall... connects to the red bulb, which also connects a wire to one of the white bulbs on the same contact. from the one white bulb, it goes to another white bulb, then that one white bulb goes to the rocker switch, then from the rocker switch goes to the other contact on the red bulb area. The red bulb then connects into a push switch which then leads back out to the AC current.
So basically push button turns on/off the whole unit which is connected thru the red bulb, and the white bulbs piggy back off the contacts on the red bulb being interrupted by a rocker switch.
Now by design I think making one bulb follow the last is probably not the best way to do it, and that instead I should perhaps make a common lead to all the bulbs on one end, but then run then one after the other on the other line. (ie: they all directly connect to 1 wire, but run one after the other on the other wire). So basically looking for confirmation on rewiring.
issue 2 - diffusion
Right now the lid has a small 5x7 cut of frosted glass separated by about an inch from a sheet of clear glass. what I want to do is put four pegs in the corner down near the bulbs and drop in a larger peice of frosted glass in hoping of diffusing the light even further before hitting the negative. Also because I'm using lower wattage (27W each) bulbs and duration is not constant I could also maybe use a solid white lenoleum or some other kind of plastic/polymer block, kinda like what you see on those cold heads on enlargers.
Advice on this?
Pictures

