I'm also CS embedded engineer so I tried to not to make a project about it. I needed to remind me that my hobby is darkroom printing, not darkroom timer/analyzer building
Thanks for the warning about that. Luckily, I copied your idea and put a blackout switch on the controller, so if worst comes to worst, I'll change the settings, turn off the display, and then pull out the paper.Make sure you darkroom-test your display.
Looking over the manual of the 890, it seems as though its designed specifically to read a variety of common formats of manufacturer-provided process control strips.Very nice. One of my X-rites is the 890 automatic densitometer with an rs-232 intended to go to a modem for two way communication. The interesting thing about the 890 is you just feed the strip (transmission or reflection) into the slot and it determines if it is transmission or reflection and reads and records (or transmits) all the patches automatically.
Just found the second manual. I'm guessing the part that applies is the section on "Generic Strips", but I'm not sure whether a typical step wedge paper exposure would qualify or if you'd have to make some jig to make it expose with the region separation that's recommended there.There are two manuals for it. The second manual describes the film formats.
And its been more than 20 years, so this product is free for the takingA patent trades a limited period of exclusivity in exchange for revealing everything about the invention to the point that someone 'skilled in the art' could duplicate the invention. After 20 years your product is free for the taking.
I think any large corporation with lawyers to write their patents does exactly this. Heck, I have a patent (from work) that the lawyers laced with so much nonsense that I don't think anyone could actually figure out the invention from reading the patent by itself.Kodak was famous for gaming the system by breaking an invention into pieces, obfuscating and individually patenting the pieces, and then covering the whole with a thick layer of red herring irrelevancies. Then if someone did happen to come up with the a similar product Kodak would extract the relevant bits, put them back together again and claim infringement.
An employee at the prior large company I worked for mentioned that the company uses patents as "trading cards".
That is very nice. Do you do the interpolation with triangulation? Or do you try to get the curve formula?Okay, I think its time for another update... Now that I'm able to directly feed densitometer readings into my device
The way the math works, basically involves combining the step wedge properties and the "Paper Exposure Value" to determine the amount of light that actually fell on each patch of the step wedge exposure. It then interpolates the graph of this versus the reflection densitometer readings of the paper, and finds the relevant intercept points.
No, its not a touch screen. That's just one of the prompt display styles used by the display library I'm using (u8g2) that I haven't shown much in the shared screenshots.The bottom screen has [OK] and [Cancel] buttons on the screen. Is this a touch-screen perchance?
You can already do this. I just haven't built out the functionality to do complex calibration calculations based on it, but I do provide all the information from which could could nail down the calibration numbers yourself with that method.Because the Printalyzer controls the enlarger, I suggest that you allow the user to make his own test-strip the conventional way instead of using a Stouffer wedge.
That is very nice. Do you do the interpolation with triangulation? Or do you try to get the curve formula?
My spreadsheet that does all this automatically for film measures a slope of a tiny portion of a curve by assuming the line is straight between the two reference points straddling the value to be computed.
Indeed you can. I've certainly done a lot of tinkering between spreadsheets, math software, and standalone test programs myself in the process of doing all of this.Nice thing about computers, once you have the dataset entered, you can go crazy with the math. My spreadsheet for film calculates ASA (ISO), Delta-X and W-speeds and contrast index and draws the graph with all the calculated points.
Beware when using a step tablet for sensitometry. The tablet may be accurate but the light source won't be uniform, especially if the light source is an enlarger. Problems really arise if you are using a projected step tablet because all sorts of effects now come into play.
Exposing at high enlarger heights will help with edge fall off but will really play havoc with stray light effects. Put a mask in the negative carrier so you are only illuminating the wedge. And check with a meter. You should put alignment strips on the densitometer so you are always measuring each step on test print in the same place.
I'm not giving the advice through needing to blow off air. I have been there and done that. I'm trying to save you some grief.
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