If you could automate your film processing, would you?

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Europan

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Automation is my mortal enemy. Of course, there is nothing I can do about it, humanity is stumbling in that direction, it’s just my nature, namely that I love to do things entirely myself, with my hands, with my feel, learning something each time. To process photographic materials in the dark, that’s how I do it, is to meditate. I love, I need it. By the same token I am able to synchronize picture and sound on an editing device (Moviola, Steenbeck), you know, image film and magnetic film. Precisely.

Automation inhibits physical experience, personal development, a feel for nature, strong and habile people. A photographer who doesn’t develop pictures her/himself is no photographer to me.
 

Jim Jones

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Automation is a blessing. Without it we all might be threshing grain by hand and weaving our own clothing.
 

TheFlyingCamera

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I'm very content with my Jobo, because the amount of automation it does provide is a big help, and the parts that aren't automated allow me flexibility in terms of chemistry, time and temperature. Yes it's big and bulky, but that size allows me to run anywhere from a single roll to ten at a time, or process sheets of film from a single 4x5 to five 5x12/8x10 at a time, or process prints up to 16x20. If I had a bigger darkroom, a separate dedicated film processor would be nice. I'd love one at $300, but I don't see that as being a terribly realistic price point. Your software development costs for it alone would drive the price much higher. You'd need to provide a mechanism to set time, temperature, rotation speed, chemical sequence, and be able to store those sequences in easy to remember groupings, plus allow on-the-fly overrides ( for example, I put in my time and temp for Tmax 400 in Pyrocat HD for my Normal (N) development. I should be able to recall that, then hit a "customize" button, and alter the time for development, or fixer). And I should be able to do more than four rolls at a time. Otherwise you're not offering enough automation to provide a feature set to lure people away from existing proven alternatives.
 

Luckless

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I wouldn't want to etch & drill pcb's but the diy part sound like something I'd do. If it was a kit how would you 9or me) assemble a leak proof tank? People ,make diy fish tanks
with plexiglass & solvent and you can make precise parts for a kit. Assembling several smaller tanks from flat stock means greater risk of leakage.

Think it's a good idea though.

Well the typical method to address an issue like tanks would be designing it around multiple tanks that can nest in side each other, and designing the rest of the kit's pieces such that they pack neatly into a shipping container based on the volume the nested water tight tanks take up...
 

GGardner

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TL;DR: My brother and I are designing a "set it and forget it" film processing unit for all formats up to 8x10, it should be under $300. Is this interesting to anyone besides me?

I applaud your initiative, but to be honest, I wouldn't buy it. For evey hour I spent processing film, I probably spend 10 hours printing, maybe more. So, automating this step doesn't buy me much. If I had $300 extra to spend, it would probably first go to film and paper. Good luck, though.
 

mshchem

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Automation is my mortal enemy. Of course, there is nothing I can do about it, humanity is stumbling in that direction, it’s just my nature, namely that I love to do things entirely myself, with my hands, with my feel, learning something each time. To process photographic materials in the dark, that’s how I do it, is to meditate. I love, I need it. By the same token I am able to synchronize picture and sound on an editing device (Moviola, Steenbeck), you know, image film and magnetic film. Precisely.

Automation inhibits physical experience, personal development, a feel for nature, strong and habile people. A photographer who doesn’t develop pictures her/himself is no photographer to me.
And print! I suppose you can be a photographer, but if you turn over your film for process and print, someone or some machine is making the final product. Good old Ansel looked at every print as an unique individual performance, well said.
Mike
 

wiedzmin

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I posted this over on Reddit as well, but wanted to inquire here as well. The Reddit analog sub is a good place to get feedback from people who are shooting a lot of 35mm C-41, but I suspect APUG has a more mature user base, and probably a much higher percentage of photogs developing their own films at home rather than outsourcing to a lab. Without further ado, here goes:

My brother and I are considering Kickstarting a unit similar to a Jobo, which does rotary processing for films from 35mm (or smaller) up to 8x10. The idea is that you can customize your steps by order of chemicals, time, and temperature. You load your film into the developing tank, fill up the chemical reservoirs in whatever order you want them to go, and then press go. Come back in 25 minutes or whatever and your film is ready to hang up to dry. Could be used for B&W, C-41, E-6, or even RA4 prints if you wanted.

Personally I've been using rotary processing for my own 4x5 work (and a hand tank for roll films), and I'm very happy with the results. But since the process is manual, I get tired of standing around waiting for 12 minutes of dev time (or what have you) and then switching out the chemicals. It would be nice to be able to set it and forget it so I could use that time for something else (like darkroom printing) while the film goes on its own in the background. In my head I imagine being able to process an entire vacation worth of 4x5 sheets in the background while I work on darkroom printing, with a minimum of interruptions - just trading out the film for an undeveloped sheet about every half hour.

We're aiming for the lowest possible price point to make this accessible to casual hobbyists, which I think is where we find our niche in the market - automatic film processing units exist already (i.e. Jobo), but they ain't cheap and usually they're quite large. So far, we're on track to be under the $300 mark, and the unit should fit on top of your average bathroom sink. I'm just wanting to do a little market research to gauge interest in the idea before we spend any more money on prototyping. We're in the early stages of design and prototyping, with very promising results so far (and a lot of work yet to do) Feedback would be welcome from my fellow film shooters.

To the mods, hopefully this post doesn't violate the rules of the forum. The film community is one I love to be a part of, and I'm just wanting to get some feedback on our idea. If we do decide to take this to market, I hope to help spread the news about the Kickstarter here as well. Thanks all!

TL;DR: My brother and I are designing a "set it and forget it" film processing unit for all formats up to 8x10, it should be under $300. Is this interesting to anyone besides me?

I would be interested in such processor. If price will be around $500 excluding tanks and reels, I think many people will be interested as well.
 

JWMster

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Proven technology and proven manufacture is a requirement. Jobo - for whatever other faults folks might assign it... is a known quantity. I think $300 down the drain is $300 down the drain. Not interested in a Kickstarter for something that already exists UNLESS it offers some greater convenience, smaller footprint, greater flexibility, smaller price. While the Filmomat is pretty sweet as a prototype, it's price is indicative of tangible development. Could volume reduce that? Not without flimsier construction. And from what I've seen, Germans don't generally do flimsy.

For my money and maybe my money only, if the concept is only about price, I think it fails. Below some price point, credibility fails. Above another price point, prospective market size for another machine of unknown provenance shrinks significantly. If I have a fair amount invested in my negatives... there's a greater premium on quality development than is captured in a low price. Low price and a rigorous, dependable, flexible (color, B&W, etc.) reliable, proven technology... that's a winner. But in my book you have to prove all the OTHER adjectives before price gets negotiable. Price is important, but it's the last qualifier not the first.
 

Mick Fagan

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Edit: I've also never understood why we don't have a small, compact equivalent of the drug store processing machines at this point. Pull out leader of film, load into the rollers and let it slide through chemicals and out the other side.

Mainly because rollers eventually get stuff caught in the soft material that some of the rollers are made from. This in turn can and does make either impressions in the soft film emulsion, or can also make scratches that go for the entire length of the roll of film. These are often referred to as tram lines or train lines. In the graphic arts world from the late sixties through to the late eighties, large film processing machines were manufactured by manufacturers worldwide. Their sticking point was the need for absolute cleanliness of the rollers on the racks, it could be a nightmare to find a scratch source.

The C41 roller transport machinery designed for the photographic minilabs were a machine with a process at the right place and right time. They were made from materials that were reasonably robust with a process that was quite forgiving. The film was at that point in time very reliable and forgiving, still is. That said, a scratch or processing streak on a roll or sheet of film, is a real pain to the owner of said film. Holding film in reels was preferable for an absolute scratch free processing system, but that meant hand processing. Enter Jobo and their rotary processor machines, right machine at the right time and made to last. They also sold in huge numbers, something that took a while for me to digest.

I was visiting in a small town in Germany in the eighties, 1985/86/87 to be precise, Waiblingen, which is near Ludwigsburg. There in Blumen Strasse was a small photo shop, Kienzle Foto Haus. Over a three year period of visiting that shop and purchasing my F3 camera body there, as well as other photographic equipment, I became friendly with some of the staff. One day lunch was had with a couple of them. Over the course of lunch I asked about Jobo and whether they sold enough to warrant their rather large store display and stock of Jobo equipment. Their long thought out reply sort of astounded me. They mentioned that in the last year, their store had sold around 80 CPE2 units, with about 80% fitted with a lift mechanism. There were more than a few of the larger units sold to professional photographers along with a handful of the very expensive fully automatic seriously professional machines.

We talked back and forth about the sheer numbers of Jobo equipment they were moving, with the question of why they were selling so many. The answer was quite succinctly answered in one word from Herr Helmut Waschin, scratches.

Mick.
 

Sirius Glass

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I'm very content with my Jobo, because the amount of automation it does provide is a big help, and the parts that aren't automated allow me flexibility in terms of chemistry, time and temperature. Yes it's big and bulky, but that size allows me to run anywhere from a single roll to ten at a time, or process sheets of film from a single 4x5 to five 5x12/8x10 at a time, or process prints up to 16x20. If I had a bigger darkroom, a separate dedicated film processor would be nice. I'd love one at $300, but I don't see that as being a terribly realistic price point. Your software development costs for it alone would drive the price much higher. You'd need to provide a mechanism to set time, temperature, rotation speed, chemical sequence, and be able to store those sequences in easy to remember groupings, plus allow on-the-fly overrides ( for example, I put in my time and temp for Tmax 400 in Pyrocat HD for my Normal (N) development. I should be able to recall that, then hit a "customize" button, and alter the time for development, or fixer). And I should be able to do more than four rolls at a time. Otherwise you're not offering enough automation to provide a feature set to lure people away from existing proven alternatives.


Me too. I am very satisfied with my Jobo. It would be hard to change my choice.
 

Michael Firstlight

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Well, I just pulled the trigger and bought an 8-roll PhotoThem Sidekick SK8-RH for $900. That might seem high to some, but an even older one sold for $1200 recently. What I really wanted was a Super Sidekick 8 at the same technology level as the Super Sidekick SSK-4V, but Photo-them doesn't build and sell the 8 roll units now - discontinued because they couldn't get the 8 roll drums anymore. But this older SK8-RH one is in good shape and comes with 2 8-roll and 2 4-roll (newer style) drums. Photo-Them still builds the Super Sidekick SSK-4V units and services/rebuilds the older units, and I spoke with the lead tech there. For $1,500 USD they'll completely rebuild an SK8-RH and make it the same as the SSK-4V with all of the latest tech - like new on the inside after the rebuild. So at the end of the day its a good way to avoid paying $7,000 for a new Super Sidekick SSK-4V and get the benefits of it supporting 8-roll processing. The total project will cost me $2500 or so by the time I'm done, but buying one used one and having it factory rebuilt seems to be the best way to get a top of the line automatic 8-roll compact film processor with all of the latest temp control and microprocessor tech.

I doubt anyone can build something as good for anywhere near that.

MFL
 

Kilgallb

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I would pay up to $300 for a system that keeps chemicals and water at 104F +/-0.5. Forget the automation, just control the temperature.
 

Michael Firstlight

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I would pay up to $300 for a system that keeps chemicals and water at 104F +/-0.5. Forget the automation, just control the temperature.

Yah, but even if your chem is brought to precise temp, keeping it precise throughout the entire process is what's really critical. For what you want, a simple $300 Jobo TBE tempering unit would suffice. That's why people pay such a huge a premium for a Sidekick - the newer ones have temp sensors in the unit and inside the tank too - ensuring that you keep that +/- 0.5 temp constant throughout (I believe the latest Sidekick temp tolerance is even tighter - maybe to .01 or .02). So it's not just a matter of temp control for optimal development quality - not to mention consistency and control with agitation and speed of starting/stopping chemical reaction, or if you want to adjust processing consistently. Not so critical for B&W, but for color work it all matters.
 

rpavich

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I have to say, I'm VERY skeptical that you could pull this off as described; however IF you could, I'd certainly be willing to buy one.
 

Kilgallb

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Yah, but even if your chem is brought to precise temp, keeping it precise throughout the entire process is what's really critical. For what you want, a simple $300 Jobo TBE tempering unit would suffice. That's why people pay such a huge a premium for a Sidekick - the newer ones have temp sensors in the unit and inside the tank too - ensuring that you keep that +/- 0.5 temp constant throughout (I believe the latest Sidekick temp tolerance is even tighter - maybe to .01 or .02). So it's not just a matter of temp control for optimal development quality - not to mention consistency and control with agitation and speed of starting/stopping chemical reaction, or if you want to adjust processing consistently. Not so critical for B&W, but for color work it all matters.
I agree, that would be better, but for $300 bucks it gets me about 90% of the way. Currently I fill my unicolor drum with 1l of water at 104F for a pre soak then developer. I think better temperature control would get me more consistent results.
 
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BHuij

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I appreciate everyone's feedback. My brother and I are making a lot of progress on our design, sourcing materials, etc. As we get closer to completing our first prototype, the price seems to be creeping up. I'm sure this doesn't surprise most of you :wink: However, at this stage I still believe we can hit below $400. It's still early to tell for sure, but I'll make sure to keep everyone in the loop.

When we first had this idea, we identified a few "deal breakers" that would be good enough reasons not to proceed with a Kickstarter:

1) If we couldn't get to an attractive price point (beating out used Jobo options, etc.)
2) If we couldn't get consistent results (i.e. if I wouldn't feel comfortable using this for my own work)
4) If the completed machine took so much time to assemble that we have to totally devalue our time to produce them
3) If there just wasn't any market interest

So far we haven't hit any of these roadblocks, so it's full steam ahead.

Please feel free to keep offering any suggestions, concerns, questions, or anything else about our project. I'll do what I can to address these as we continue working on our prototype.
 

Cholentpot

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I appreciate everyone's feedback. My brother and I are making a lot of progress on our design, sourcing materials, etc. As we get closer to completing our first prototype, the price seems to be creeping up. I'm sure this doesn't surprise most of you :wink: However, at this stage I still believe we can hit below $400. It's still early to tell for sure, but I'll make sure to keep everyone in the loop.

When we first had this idea, we identified a few "deal breakers" that would be good enough reasons not to proceed with a Kickstarter:

1) If we couldn't get to an attractive price point (beating out used Jobo options, etc.)
2) If we couldn't get consistent results (i.e. if I wouldn't feel comfortable using this for my own work)
4) If the completed machine took so much time to assemble that we have to totally devalue our time to produce them
3) If there just wasn't any market interest

So far we haven't hit any of these roadblocks, so it's full steam ahead.

Please feel free to keep offering any suggestions, concerns, questions, or anything else about our project. I'll do what I can to address these as we continue working on our prototype.

Will you charge more for racing stripes?
 
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BHuij

BHuij

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Will you charge more for racing stripes?
One of our goals from the very beginning was to be able to provide racing stripes at a price point that the individual consumer could afford. Jobo and Phototherm have racing stripe units available, but cost is prohibitive for all but large labs who are consistently processing film at over 100 miles per hour.

Our prototype uses inexpensively sourced electrical tape-material for the racing stripes, bringing the cost per unit down to pennies. Soon, you too will be able to develop your films in style, and without having to spend hundreds or thousands of dollars in markup on proprietary or brand-name racing stripes.
 

Cholentpot

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One of our goals from the very beginning was to be able to provide racing stripes at a price point that the individual consumer could afford. Jobo and Phototherm have racing stripe units available, but cost is prohibitive for all but large labs who are consistently processing film at over 100 miles per hour.

Our prototype uses inexpensively sourced electrical tape-material for the racing stripes, bringing the cost per unit down to pennies. Soon, you too will be able to develop your films in style, and without having to spend hundreds or thousands of dollars in markup on proprietary or brand-name racing stripes.

Awesome! And it will have a shoulder thing that goes up I presume?
 

Sirius Glass

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The top of my Jobo is red.
 

Down Under

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This sounds rather like trying to reinvent the wheel, and then sell it for peanuts.

A case in point. Jobo tried this in the (I believe) late 1990s. The ultimate product was the Jobo Duolab. By the time I came across this small marvel, the sale price has dropped to about A$300 (in Australia) and the retailer in Melbourne was trying to move about two dozen new machines for this heavily discounted price. I bought two. They have worked wonders for me, suddenly B&W and C41 my film processing became super easy with constant good results. The print making facility on this units quite frankly doesn't suit me, after dropping several big prints off the Jobo tong provided with the units and into the depths of the three tanks I gave up and went back to my processing trays. But for films, I've not found anything better.

But a new unit for $300 (which will be closer to A$500 in Down Under dollars)? Unlikely. To make any sort of decent profit on the items, you will have to use super fast assembly line manufacturing with bottom-of-the-market parts to build it. Bits and pieces will fall off and break down in time. Will they be replaceable? The major flaw I found in Jobo's marketing strategy for the Duolab was they never provided spare parts for this unit. Rubber drainage tubes and plugs have worn out and I've had to improvise replacements from hardware store basics, fortunately the heating systems (originally created from a coffee maker system!) still work well and maintain exact stated temperatures, but if/ when these go West, the machines will then be rotary units and nothing else. that's why I bought two of the units - prices were right and I use one and keep the other as a backup. It's still in its original package after 14 years, touch wood, but with all such old electricals, you never know. I've just been lucky.

Let me also say that while I'm generally sympathetic to Kickstarter projects, I've found many of these to be one pony shows and the creators of whatever item they want to raise funds for usually mean well but haven't put their markets or marketing strategies to any test. Often as not the gadget is a brilliant mind flash of inspiration but little more. In this mostly digital photo age, what is the market for a new processor aimed at the declining numbers of analog shooters who still process film and make prints? A visit to Ebay will reveal many Jobo and other items in good used condition being flogged off at low prices. With so much competition, how many people will buy a new version of an old item? Maybe if the new product is a big improvement on the old, yes - but if it's another version of something that has basically seen its day and is on the decline as far as sales market go, what's the point?

Apologies if I seem to be negative about all this, but I've been around long enough to see many such projects start with a big bang, and end up with a whimper. I started out in life as a journalist in the newspaper trade.Do you remember the Graflex? After two decades it got supplanted by the Speed Graphic, which in turn fell by the wayside when the Rolleiflex took over.Then the Nikon F came along and...well, you know the story.

All the above stated, I accept it may be that there is a viable if limited sale market for this item, but a $300 sale price is unrealistic and a fast road to corporate bankruptcy for the makers. This said, I am quite interested in the project, I've bookmarked the post and I'll follow this thread. If you decide to go ahead with it, my very best wishes and good luck.
 
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