removedacct2
Member
- Joined
- May 26, 2018
- Messages
- 366
I started playing with Kodak Vision movie film.
I remove the remjet with a solution of soda and wash under vigorous agitation few times, which removes most remjet, but after the last wash (following fixer) there's still some not much but must be removed. So I hang the film and wipe the remains. Then I must load the film again in a spiral for the stabilizer. I use AP or Paterson tanks with AP spirals for color (they load/unload much faster than steel tanks) but I found it risky to try to reload a wet film in these. That's when I recalled my sovjet tanks, that I no longer use because they are for spindle rotations and I much prefer agitation by inversions.
But they are soft plastic with a wide track only on the base, no metallic bearings, the top is flat, film is hold by a simple pinch, and spiraled inside the track very easily and fast. It works very well with wet film.
I took a short video:
I remove the remjet with a solution of soda and wash under vigorous agitation few times, which removes most remjet, but after the last wash (following fixer) there's still some not much but must be removed. So I hang the film and wipe the remains. Then I must load the film again in a spiral for the stabilizer. I use AP or Paterson tanks with AP spirals for color (they load/unload much faster than steel tanks) but I found it risky to try to reload a wet film in these. That's when I recalled my sovjet tanks, that I no longer use because they are for spindle rotations and I much prefer agitation by inversions.
But they are soft plastic with a wide track only on the base, no metallic bearings, the top is flat, film is hold by a simple pinch, and spiraled inside the track very easily and fast. It works very well with wet film.
I took a short video: