Act 5 - Operation
Not much to say about the operation. The mechanical aspects will hopefully have been covered above. I've done some b/w printing with the splitgrade controller and that is really nice. As I was hopiong it is saving me time. And it is so much easier to make well dosed changes in exposure and grade to get the final image I want, quickly. It is an expensive option, but one of the very few occasions to actually buy some life time.
The funny thing is that I would have never bought this expensive option for an existing enlarger bought on ebay for little money (well not any longer, really). But once I pushed myself over the pain threshold towards a brand new enlarger, the extra spend suddendly seemed like a good idea for the reason above.
The C-Series is the compact and value line. It is heavier and a bit bulkier than the LPL7700 but it isn't taking up much more space. Probably quite comparable to an LPL 4x5 enlarger, which I only know from pictures. I have printed a few frames of 35mm, 6x6 and 4x5 each by now. It is really a convenient device and it doesn'table feel different than using a medium format enlarger. Except that this is a very nice device, new and has all the features I could want.
Also there is the warm, fuzzy feeling that I can get any support from the factory I can afford to pay for. E.g. when I was looking at 150mm lenses at the auction site I noticed that this has a different threading. Can anyone tell me if a random 4x5 enlarger auctioned there will take it? Can I buy the lens board? Kienzle has the part.
When I will, eventually, buy the punch and contact frame for pin registered mask making I will send the stuff and my film holder to Kienzle and they will adjust the film holder. I actually paid for that option, already. But they suggested to wait until I have the equipment to match.
Also to shock you I'll add in two pictures of my darkroom inside a boiler room. The room stays cool all year, even cooler in winter, but gets a bit warmer over time when I close the door. I do sweat a little in the summer. But the heated Nova allows me to have a constant developer temperature all year. In winter the solutions on the shelf, next to the outside wall, get as cold as 12°C. Great for my papers, too.
I have the shelf at the far end and the table to myself. While operating I can spread out a little, but put it all back when I finish. No running water. I carry water into the room. A bucket with an immersion pump is the reservoir feeding the wash slot of my Nova. It drains into another bucket. The 10L bucket is full after 2-3 RC prints.
When I do FB paper it is rinsed/washed for two minutes in the Nova and then no more than 15 minutes in a Patterson washer in the laundry room. I use replenished, neutral fixer and no wash aid. But we have very hard water. No sink in the laundry room, btw. Only a tap and a floor drain. The house was build in the 60s. That is why the ceiling is a little lower than in more modern buildings. One of the few things that can't be upgraded.