Kirk Keyes said:
For those interested in using a film scanner, here's a nice paper on using a Nikon Coolscan 8000 as an automated densitometer.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2745&context=lbnl
Kirk,
I am attaching a copy of a page from a Philbrick manual I used many years ago when working for NASA. We used analog computers to drive our simulators and for other simulations of dynamic systems when digital computers were not fast enough to run them in real time. I earned my Gadget nickname mostly because my program board often had something plugged into it that didn't come with the analog computer. Anyway, this is where I got the idea for my easel densitometer.
Circuit 2.22 (a) is a practical circuit for a log amp. Replace the resistor R with a phototransistor connected directly to the positive power supply and the output will be a constant times the log of the photo current over quite a wide range. Use the same circuit with the resistor atached to the arm of a pot connected between + and - power supplies to get a reference voltage that you may sum into another op amp (not a log amp) or a simple resistor summing net and then into a panel meter.
Using two log amps allows the level setting and the photosensing to be independently adjusted. Once you have the gain set to measure log, changing the level will not affect that gain. Also, you get a first order temperature compensation. I have never seen the need for any more complex temperature correction, mainly because if the darkroom changed temperature that much I wouldn't be in it.
The 741 op amp is not good enough. It has too much input current. You need a JFET or CMOS op amp. TL082 will do, but they may have something a lot better now. They are still cheap.
The second attachment shows essentially what I have been using. I didn't put in the circuitry for the powers supply. IC voltage regulators are cheap and easy to use. If you want to get fancy, you can use 10 turn precision pots for P1 and P2. Its good to have one for P2 so that you can easily return to a setting. I use the circuit to set printing exposure by Zones, which requires a different setting of P2 for each grade of paper or printing filter. P1 is then dependent on paper speed.