I’ve got some good news about the cds cell measurements.
I put some more thought into this today, to figure out what’s happening. The response curves that bernard_L showed for a specific cds cell, shows linear response on a Log - Log scale. The straight lines don’t go through the zero point, so you have a non-zero Y intercept.
Any straight line function can be described in the form Y = mX + b where m is the slope and b is the Y intercept value (or value of Y when X=0). If we just look at Logs of the two resistance values or two conductance values for Y, we can look at the difference. Log(Y2) - Log(Y1) = Log(Y2/Y1) = Log((mX1+b/(mX2+b))
If b was 0 then this reduces to Log(mX1/mX2) and the m cancels out to be Log(X1/X2) This would mean the Log difference in light intensity (or difference in density) would equal the Log difference in Resistance or Conductance.
Unfortunately, b is not 0, so it’s not an easy calculation.
The good news is that if the Log Log response is linear over a wide range, we can still use a relatively simple linear formula to calculate densities. We just need two known reference densities to calibrate the system.
If you have a step wedge with already marked density values, you can use that.
I have a home-made step wedge I made decades ago with marked density values. I took two medium density steps, one at 2.16, and the other at 0.87. I then measured the resistance values of the cell under each step. I made sure the light source was strong enough to get resistance readings around the middle of it’s range. I then calculate the Log of each of these resistances.
Since density values are already Log units, these become my X values. The Log Resistance values become my Y units. If a straight line is plotted through these two points, you can easily calculate m and b. m = (Log(R2)-Log(R1))/(Density2-Density1)
b can be calculated using either one of the points b = Y - mX b = Log(R1) - m(Density1)
Now use the formula Y = mX + b to calculate the density for any other resistance value. To do that, you rearrange the formula to calculate Density from Resistance, to the form X = (Y - b)/m
or Density = (Log(Resistance3) - b)/m
I made up a simple Excel sheet to do the calculations. I have the two reference densities already entered. I just need to find the resistance values for the two points, and enter those. The last entry is the resistance at any other random point, and just calculate the density using the formulas. Excel does all the heavy lifting with the calculations. The results were excellent for a seat-o-the pants experiment. Caculated density values were very close to the actual density. I’ve attached some pictures of a couple of sample measurements. It definitely would be good enough for doing quick evaluations of the density of your negatives, without needing a densitometer.
If you’re using your reference steps in an enlarger, you need to calibrate the system at a specific height and aperture, and all the measurements need to be made at the same conditions.
In the sample pictures of the Excel file, X Density 1 and X Density 2 are my reference negative densities. Y Resistance 1 and Y Resistance 2 are going to vary depending on the brightness of the light source, so they are specific to each setup.
Slope m and b are calculated values, and will be unique for each setup. New Resistance is the measured Resistance value of the cell under an unknown density. Calculated Density is the calculated density of the unknown density, based on the linear formula. Actual is the actual measured
density via a densitometer.
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View attachment 416994