I found this link for sheet film holders. I don’t know if it would work for 135 cassettes:
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McMaster-Carr
McMaster-Carr is the complete source for your plant with over 595,000 products. 98% of products ordered ship from stock and deliver same or next day.www.mcmaster.com
just seeing a link to the McMaster Carr site, not a specific product
I have some old Ilford casettes that I suspect may have a light leak from bad light seal felt. Do any of you have suggestions for a replacement material? Thanks!
Are reusable cassettes that hard to find/expensive these days?
I have some old Ilford casettes that I suspect may have a light leak from bad light seal felt. Do any of you have suggestions for a replacement material? Thanks!
First, I learned the other day that Foma sell old-fashioned metal 35mm cassettes - check their website. Might be your easiest solution?
Second, experience would lead me to suspect distortion of the body, and consequent poor fit of the end caps, before the felt. Why do you suspect the felt specifically? In any case, you’ll presumably need to open out the body to fit new felt, so it would be a good move to find a piece of dowel the right size to act as a form when re-forming the shape.
Second, experience would lead me to suspect distortion of the body, and consequent poor fit of the end caps, before the felt.
First, I learned the other day that Foma sell old-fashioned metal 35mm cassettes - check their website. Might be your easiest solution?
I'd normally agree with that but old Ilford cassettes have very good end-caps and the way the opening is bent makes it very rigid and secure (both sides). Normal cassettes can get a little bowed out on the flat side - but these ones don't have a flat side.
Compare:
View attachment 350427 (photo from here)
I haven’t reused standard cassettes for decades, but if in doubt about lip I would simply replace cassettes. Cassette cheaper than film. The only reusable cassettes I use: Leitz and Zeiss...no felt because film doesn’t touch cassette...but they are camera specific.
The Leica cassettes are slightly longer than the standard cassette, so if you use the standard cassette, in a Barnack (and likely) a M that takes them, include a small cone shaped flashlight type spring in the bottom of the cassette bay, so your film/cassette does not 'drop' the images into sprocket holes.
I have been using standard cassettes in Leica M cameras since mid 1960s, first time I ever heard about the need for a spring.
Don, I found the perfect (for me) shim in a rubber or plastic garden hose washer. The brand is Hozelock, a UK firm.The spring or shim is for use in thread-mount Leicas. They tend to run the image rectangle onto the edge of the sprocket holes, otherwise. It's a little annoying and fixed by using Leica reloadable cassettes (the cameras are designed for those). I don't think it's a problem in any M camera.
The spring or shim is for use in thread-mount Leicas. They tend to run the image rectangle onto the edge of the sprocket holes, otherwise. It's a little annoying and fixed by using Leica reloadable cassettes (the cameras are designed for those). I don't think it's a problem in any M camera.
I have never in over 60 yrs experienced this problem using regular cassettes or Leitz cassettes with LTM Leicas, Ms, or Canons. Nor, for any other rangefinders, such as Nikon or Contax. I have no Nikon cassettes. Never have I experienced an image running into sprocket holes. Perhaps such a problem could result from not loading camera properly rather than a cassette problem.
I have never in over 60 yrs experienced this problem using regular cassettes or Leitz cassettes with LTM Leicas
It happened to HCB too. I clearly remember instances at an exhibition in London in the early 1970s, where the image was printed to include the rebate, and the image overlapped the sprocket holes. Made a big impression on me. Strangely, I can’t find any examples online. It’s as though they have been clipped and sanitised since his death. This was the closest I could find.That's great. It's definitely something that happens with LTM Leicas, in spite of that. It consistently happens with my Barnack Leicas (pre-C LTMs) - I can't remember if it happens with the C, F, or G. (Mainly because I don't care.)
Even Eisenstaedt put up with it:
View attachment 350683
Sometimes, the frame can overlap the edge of the sprocket holes.
View attachment 350684
And I didn't know about these contact sheets before a minute ago, when I decided to look, because I knew he used an LTM Leica. He obviously didn't care much.
It’s as though they have been clipped
That's a famous/infamous exception to his self-imposed 'no cropping' rule. No, I mean it's as if at some point HCB and/or Magnum - who I assume still control what HCB images are available online - have decided that cropping to tidy the edges is acceptable. That's the only explanation I can think of.
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