Hi, Folks,
I seem to be having trouble with light output on an Omega DII I recently picked up and wonder if maybe I've got it setup wrong. I'm moving from a B22 perspective where I had too much light and always had to work with the lens stopped down to F22, to the DII needing to be wide open at F5.6-8 and still having exposures run 40+ seconds.
The enlarger itself is an Omega DII, but it has a D2V variable condenser. The standard condenser that came with it is the larger 6" variety. I'm using an 80mm Nikkor lens mounted to the flat lens board with 6X6 negatives and making 8x10 prints. I keep the variable condenser in its lowest level (looks like its laying in a hole inside the house). I have aligned the enlarger since bringing it home. The enlarger came with a burnt out 150W bulb, but everything I read says the standard is 75W (including the side of the lamp house) so that's what I replaced it with (PH211 enlarger bulb from B&H). I know there had been different sized condensers available and wonder if 75 watt bulbs were for the 4" condenser but I have not read that in any literature. In fact, I think KHB lists a 250W bulb you might use, too. Should I just up this to 150W?
What determines the bulb wattage? I can move up to 150W but feel like something else is wrong here. Thoughts on this?
Also--how small can you expect to print with this enlarger? I thought I should be able to print on 5X7 but simply cannot get down that small. I'm aware that there is a bellows attachment available for smaller prints, but really would have thought this enlarger could handle 5X7 without it, so I feel like something is off there, too. To save money, my work flow uses 5X7 paper for tests and family photos, then up to 8X10, 11X14 for the better photos.
Thanks!
Sean
I seem to be having trouble with light output on an Omega DII I recently picked up and wonder if maybe I've got it setup wrong. I'm moving from a B22 perspective where I had too much light and always had to work with the lens stopped down to F22, to the DII needing to be wide open at F5.6-8 and still having exposures run 40+ seconds.
The enlarger itself is an Omega DII, but it has a D2V variable condenser. The standard condenser that came with it is the larger 6" variety. I'm using an 80mm Nikkor lens mounted to the flat lens board with 6X6 negatives and making 8x10 prints. I keep the variable condenser in its lowest level (looks like its laying in a hole inside the house). I have aligned the enlarger since bringing it home. The enlarger came with a burnt out 150W bulb, but everything I read says the standard is 75W (including the side of the lamp house) so that's what I replaced it with (PH211 enlarger bulb from B&H). I know there had been different sized condensers available and wonder if 75 watt bulbs were for the 4" condenser but I have not read that in any literature. In fact, I think KHB lists a 250W bulb you might use, too. Should I just up this to 150W?
What determines the bulb wattage? I can move up to 150W but feel like something else is wrong here. Thoughts on this?
Also--how small can you expect to print with this enlarger? I thought I should be able to print on 5X7 but simply cannot get down that small. I'm aware that there is a bellows attachment available for smaller prints, but really would have thought this enlarger could handle 5X7 without it, so I feel like something is off there, too. To save money, my work flow uses 5X7 paper for tests and family photos, then up to 8X10, 11X14 for the better photos.
Thanks!
Sean
