Svenedin
Member
I am sorry if these questions have been asked before. I have searched the forum and I have not found an answer.
I am going to set up a darkroom again. Although I have been using film recently I have not yet gone back to printing. It has been many years since I printed anything.
I have been searching through my "junk" bedroom and I have found my enlarger amongst other things including a Durst enlarger timer. It is an LPL 6600 condenser enlarger (I believe marketed as Omega in the USA). Tonight I gave the enlarger a thorough clean and dusting and all is working.
When I was last using a darkroom I used graded papers, usually just grade 2. I cannot really recall using multigrade papers but I obviously did because I found an Ilford grade 2 filter sitting on the condenser.
Now I find that graded papers are somewhat scarce so to be pragmatic about it I will have to use variable contrast papers. My enlarger does not really have a filter drawer. (at least not what I would think a filter drawer is). It does have a hatch in the lamp house and a tray that slides out that is designed for a filter but it is not a slot to put a filter in. It is a metal tray with a piece of heat absorbing glass mounted in it. I believe (I no longer have the instructions) the idea is to cut a filter to fit (3 inch x 3 inch) and place it below the heat absorbing glass (which can be removed by moving a clip). This seems like a very tedious way to use filters. It appears that last time I used the enlarger I just put the filter resting on the condenser instead.
Unless I am prepared to focus the image with a filter in place (difficult). I would have to take the filter out and put it back in again for every image. It is much easier to focus with white light.
Does anyone have an enlarger like this and what do you do? This enlarger has a swivel red filter below the lens. Could I use the Ilford below lens filters instead of above lens and how do they mount? Could the below lens filters be used with the swivel mount? This would be far more convenient. The Ilford below lens filters are over £50 for a set so I am reluctant to buy them to find they are unsuitable or give inferior image quality compared to the above lens ones.
Thanks in advance, Stephen
I am going to set up a darkroom again. Although I have been using film recently I have not yet gone back to printing. It has been many years since I printed anything.
I have been searching through my "junk" bedroom and I have found my enlarger amongst other things including a Durst enlarger timer. It is an LPL 6600 condenser enlarger (I believe marketed as Omega in the USA). Tonight I gave the enlarger a thorough clean and dusting and all is working.
When I was last using a darkroom I used graded papers, usually just grade 2. I cannot really recall using multigrade papers but I obviously did because I found an Ilford grade 2 filter sitting on the condenser.
Now I find that graded papers are somewhat scarce so to be pragmatic about it I will have to use variable contrast papers. My enlarger does not really have a filter drawer. (at least not what I would think a filter drawer is). It does have a hatch in the lamp house and a tray that slides out that is designed for a filter but it is not a slot to put a filter in. It is a metal tray with a piece of heat absorbing glass mounted in it. I believe (I no longer have the instructions) the idea is to cut a filter to fit (3 inch x 3 inch) and place it below the heat absorbing glass (which can be removed by moving a clip). This seems like a very tedious way to use filters. It appears that last time I used the enlarger I just put the filter resting on the condenser instead.
Unless I am prepared to focus the image with a filter in place (difficult). I would have to take the filter out and put it back in again for every image. It is much easier to focus with white light.
Does anyone have an enlarger like this and what do you do? This enlarger has a swivel red filter below the lens. Could I use the Ilford below lens filters instead of above lens and how do they mount? Could the below lens filters be used with the swivel mount? This would be far more convenient. The Ilford below lens filters are over £50 for a set so I am reluctant to buy them to find they are unsuitable or give inferior image quality compared to the above lens ones.
Thanks in advance, Stephen
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