rshepard
Member
I've just started using my Jobo CPA-2 with the 2840 print drums to develop paper. I have three print drums, and I let them sit upside down on a dish rack to drain between uses. I also alternate among them.
However, I get what appear to my relatively-inexperienced eyes as water marks on the finished prints. I assume this is because the inside is not bone dry, or I get water on my hands from the damp exterior and transfer that water to the paper as I insert it in the drum. The problem is almost certain to occur if I load two 8x10" papers in the drum because it's such a tight fit that I end up struggling in the near dark and use my hands to see if the papers' edges are behind the spacers.
Assuming that others have experienced this situation and solved it, I'd like to learn how folks here dry the drums between uses, and if my assumption is correct that these are water streaks and marks from my hands.
Perhaps I need to design and build a drum dryer that is similar to the film dryer I built, but with heat.
TIA,
Rich
However, I get what appear to my relatively-inexperienced eyes as water marks on the finished prints. I assume this is because the inside is not bone dry, or I get water on my hands from the damp exterior and transfer that water to the paper as I insert it in the drum. The problem is almost certain to occur if I load two 8x10" papers in the drum because it's such a tight fit that I end up struggling in the near dark and use my hands to see if the papers' edges are behind the spacers.
Assuming that others have experienced this situation and solved it, I'd like to learn how folks here dry the drums between uses, and if my assumption is correct that these are water streaks and marks from my hands.
Perhaps I need to design and build a drum dryer that is similar to the film dryer I built, but with heat.
TIA,
Rich