edwardk
Member
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2009
- Messages
- 3
- Format
- Medium Format
Well, this is an embarrassing question. I read with interest another thread on the Jobo 2500 series tanks and reels, and noticed that a couple of posters observed that they found the 2502 reel to be easier to use for 120 than the 1500 series reel. So I decided to buy a 2502 reel, and if I were happy with it, I'd follow that up with the 2520 tank.
The reel arrived, and I eventually succeeded in getting it set up for 120 film (I had been nervous that too much effort would break the thing). The reel is properly locked into place, the opening gates from the two pieces line up, all is good.
Except that I can't get film to wind onto the reel at all. I've been practicing in broad daylight with an old roll of film, and either nothing happens at all when I try to walk the film onto the reel, or, even more perversely, the roll elegantly walks backwards and falls off the reel.
I've used film developing tanks and reels before, so I am not quite as stupid as I make myself out to be. But I can't figure out what's going on here. I even suffered the ultimate indignity of finding and reading the Jobo instructions, to no avail.
Can anyone help?
Edward
The reel arrived, and I eventually succeeded in getting it set up for 120 film (I had been nervous that too much effort would break the thing). The reel is properly locked into place, the opening gates from the two pieces line up, all is good.
Except that I can't get film to wind onto the reel at all. I've been practicing in broad daylight with an old roll of film, and either nothing happens at all when I try to walk the film onto the reel, or, even more perversely, the roll elegantly walks backwards and falls off the reel.
I've used film developing tanks and reels before, so I am not quite as stupid as I make myself out to be. But I can't figure out what's going on here. I even suffered the ultimate indignity of finding and reading the Jobo instructions, to no avail.
Can anyone help?
Edward
