Home made E6 developing machne

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nick mulder

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Thats a lot of work and $$$ if you're using it for stills ...

Pretty cool to see it go straight from the processor and into a wet gate telecine tho

ouch!
 

hrst

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This is "echt super"!

I'm building my own cine lab also. This shows a simpler design in terms of film path but it's also much smaller than mine. The downside is that the speed is lower. According to my tests and experience, I would estimate it's about 0,5 meter per minute which is too low for perfect processing.

BUT, this said;

This one is quite compact, seems to be quite reliable and is not too difficult to construct. And it seems to work, which is most important.

Thank you for sharing the youtube link. This is really cool. I have now a competitor :D.
 

TJ Krusinski

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That's awesome, overall, minus the electronics, it seems pretty simple.
 

narigas2006

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insane! it would be cool for 120m of 16mm. For S8 cartridges I guess I'll keep the lomo tanks.
 

hrst

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The continuous lab I'm building is for 16mm and has enough dark space for at least 2000ft reel. It will process ECN-2, ECP-2, E6, BW and BW reversal, 8mm, 16mm and 35mm at lower speed. Just finished designing a new control panel unit. Dead Link Removed :D. I hope to get it finished finally this year.
 

nickandre

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except he's drying it with a hairdryer...

Very cool but very slow. You have to add the time before the film reaches the chemistry and the time it takes to run out entirely. A couple of hours to process a 50 ft reel?

But if you sped it up you'd need more chemistry and a bigger machine...still cool.
 

michaelbsc

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Let's see now, wasn't someone saying we'd never be able to build a machine to process Kodachrome at home. Sure, it's a more complicated process than e6, but certainly this machine wasn't trivial.

Makes me want to break out that old brick of 120 I have in the freezer.
 

nickandre

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Let's see now, wasn't someone saying we'd never be able to build a machine to process Kodachrome at home. Sure, it's a more complicated process than e6, but certainly this machine wasn't trivial.

Makes me want to break out that old brick of 120 I have in the freezer.

You just have to make it many times as wide and then find the chemistry. The first one is simple. I think I'll just show up in kansas and beg to use their overflow...it seems like we've all acquired a brick of PKR 120...
 

nick mulder

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120m of 16mm... sure!

But 120 ??
 

hrst

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Let's see now, wasn't someone saying we'd never be able to build a machine to process Kodachrome at home.

Kodachrome processing is not a problem of machinery at all. Kodachrome could be processed even in small hand-agitated spiral tanks and removed from spirals two times for the reverse exposures. A small and simple machine (consisting of one stepper motor, motor driver, two leds, maybe some filters and some mechanics) - about the same size as normal processing tank - could do the exposures. The real problem lies in chemistry availability and cost and process control (processing quality). I mean, if you can't get perfectly the same results as you always with Kodachrome, then there's not so much point to shoot it at all as there are much easier E6 films available; Kodachrome shooters want a specific look.
 
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Well, I'm impressed, being a photographer with years of shooting experience and years of experience working in commercial labs, as well as a basement tinkerer.

As long as we have the person, or people, who designed and built that machine, who have the passion and desire to do so, analog will NEVER die.

I have seen videos of people who run overclocked processors (I believe that is the term), with cooling towers with liquid nitrogen, and the effects when the cooling tower is removed. For my money, that hand-made processor has got the modifications that the digoids make to their computers beat by a country mile.
 

michaelbsc

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120m of 16mm... sure!

But 120 ??

Yes, I have an upopened brick of 120 size. No place to process it. But I have the film.

It was dumped on eBay as a curiosity item. Can't remember how much it was, but it was a lot cheaper than a brick of 135 was selling at B&H at the time.

It looks great on the shelf next to a Brownie Hawkeye.
 

nickandre

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Kodachrome processing is not a problem of machinery at all. Kodachrome could be processed even in small hand-agitated spiral tanks and removed from spirals two times for the reverse exposures. A small and simple machine (consisting of one stepper motor, motor driver, two leds, maybe some filters and some mechanics) - about the same size as normal processing tank - could do the exposures. The real problem lies in chemistry availability and cost and process control (processing quality). I mean, if you can't get perfectly the same results as you always with Kodachrome, then there's not so much point to shoot it at all as there are much easier E6 films available; Kodachrome shooters want a specific look.

3 times if you include the remjet removal :tongue:
 
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