In a few places (most recently some writings by Barry Thornton), I've come across the idea that, when making an enlargement, multiple short exposures will yield a different density than a single longer exposure, even if the total number of seconds matches. Or in more concrete terms, if I make a test strip with 5 exposures of 3 seconds each (uncovering as I go), then the darkest strip on there will look different than if I simply expose for 15 seconds, one time.
This makes sense if your enlarger light source has a significant "ramp-up" and/or "cool-off" period instead of just going perfectly from 0% to 100% to 0% brightness when toggled. I know this is true for fluorescent and halogen lights, and likely incandescent as well.
But what about LED lights? My enlarger currently uses a 16x16 array of neopixels as the light source. How "instantaneous" are they? I'm curious whether LED lights have a steep enough output curve when transitioning between on and off to render this a non-issue? I rarely stack exposures anymore anyway as I used localized, stop-based test strips nowadays. But the armchair scientist in me wants to know. Was there some other mechanism by which 3x5s exposures would not = 1x15s?
This makes sense if your enlarger light source has a significant "ramp-up" and/or "cool-off" period instead of just going perfectly from 0% to 100% to 0% brightness when toggled. I know this is true for fluorescent and halogen lights, and likely incandescent as well.
But what about LED lights? My enlarger currently uses a 16x16 array of neopixels as the light source. How "instantaneous" are they? I'm curious whether LED lights have a steep enough output curve when transitioning between on and off to render this a non-issue? I rarely stack exposures anymore anyway as I used localized, stop-based test strips nowadays. But the armchair scientist in me wants to know. Was there some other mechanism by which 3x5s exposures would not = 1x15s?