Those are such sketchy and abbreviated curves that it's hard to tell what is really going on. How many actual points did you read for each respective curve?
The curves didn't display very well and were originally of different dimensions. I don't know how I can modify that post now. I probably should have removed the linear curves generated by the algorithm, as it is a bit confusing. They were made on LibreOffice from 12 data points for each cyan, magenta, yellow, and neutral trace. One of the curves is composed of 24 data points. Possibly I can re-post the red light curves so the 2 top sideband curves are more visible.
An R
2 of over 0.99 is a very good fit to a linear function, and the derivative of the linear curve is just the multiplier on the x variable. Seeing how the linear regression algorithm plots were very close to the measured curves, shows the additive and proportional property of the sideband absorptions.
Filters such as 92 and 93 were intended for primitive color densitometer cutoff reading usage, not for actual color separations onto film.
No, primitive color densitometers from the 1940's used Wratten filters 29, 61, and 47B. The more narrow band color densitometry filters came later, probably when color transmission densitometry was standardized to ISO or ASTM standards, with Status A and M.
The Wratten #92 is a longpass gelatin filter with a stopband around 620 nm (I think), and has a narrower spectrum passband than the Wratten # 29.
The Wratten #93 is a gelatin bandpass filter with a maximum transmission of 545 nm, and is aligned with the magenta dye absorption peak. Wratten #61 has a peak transmission around 532nm and is broader. Green 61 filter also leaks a lot of red light.
There is no reason these can't be used for making separation negatives. Wratten #93 and #94 (blue at 450 nm) are also darker and would require more exposure time. For Kodak Separation Negative film, the #92 red gives too much correction, but the green #93 might be useable.
Even in the 1950's some commercial labs weren’t using the Wratten # 61 and 47B, as they don't align well spectrally with most types of Ektachromes. According to someone who worked in Evans Color Lab in 1957, an engineer was hired to test a new set of filters with their separation process that they were going to use. Ed Evans (deceased) was always very secretive about this and locked the separation filters they used in a safe. They were probably colored glass filters from Schott or Corning, since dichroic filters at the time were inferior. Corning made a number of special pigmented glass optical filters, now mostly replaced by bandpass dichroic filters.
I got almost identical results from my 61, 29, and 47B set as from my direct narrow band RGB additive color head channels. But I never tested Color Sep Film Type 1. That's been gone a long time. Among the films I did test were Super-XX, TMX100, TMY400, and FP4. TMX was the most cooperative; but the faster speed of TMY would make it the better candidate for in-camera separations.
I would like to see your curves of cyan, magenta, and yellow, with their unwanted absorption sidebands. Also how did you process the Super XX pan? What kind of step wedge did you use?