dkonigs
Subscriber
Hello again everyone!
I spent a bit of time talking about this project of mine near the end of my previous densitometer thread:
www.photrio.com
However, a lot has happened since then and I figured it was time to give this upcoming product a thread of its own.
The UV/VIS Densitometer is most likely going to be my next released product. I expect to have pre-release units ready to send out in the coming weeks, with full production getting underway sometime this summer. Hopefully that means full availability by this fall.
The initial product page is now up on my company website, with a bunch of bullet-point details:
www.dektronics.com
Okay, so with that out of the way, I might as well talk about what this thing is.
The Printalyzer UV/VIS Densitometer is going to be my next transmission/reflection densitometer product. On the exterior, it looks exactly like the current Printalyzer Densitometer. But on the inside, there are a lot of changes. New sensors, new LEDs, new optical path, new calibration methods.
The main headline feature is the addition of a UV transmission mode (using a 385nm UV LED light source and a UV-A sensitive light sensor), which should be able to give measurement results matching the old X-Rite 361T. It can probably maintain sufficiently accurate and repeatable measurements to higher UV densities, however, because of its light source.
For the "VIS" mode, I'm now using 3000K full-spectrum LEDs that more closely resemble the spectrum in the ISO 5 standards, combined with a light sensor that has a built-in Photopic filter. This may not make much of a difference versus the older product under most B&W measurement conditions, but it might help in some corner cases.
The optical path itself also has a number of improvements. Below the film, there is now a flashed opal diffuer (instead of matte acrylic) positioned to be in direct contact with the film. Above the film/paper, there is now a focusing lens which improves the precision of the measurement spot. This should make it easier to measure smaller patches on step wedges.
Finally, I've included a temperature sensor inside the optical sensor head, and am actually going to be doing thermal calibration and correction! Now I'll admit that the actual effect of ambient temperature on VIS measurements is miniscule, but for UV measurements its significant enough that you might notice a small change if you go between a cold house and a hot darkroom (or vice versa).
I've also been taking a good hard look at my options for calibration. While my current product is tracable to the Stouffer T5100C and R550C, for this one I wanted to take things a step further. As such, my current calibration plans for this new UV/VIS densitometer are:
That should be enough to get this thread started. Hopefully I'm not opening a whole can of worms here, but I know I probably am.
I spent a bit of time talking about this project of mine near the end of my previous densitometer thread:

Printalyzer Densitometer - A compact budget-friendly densitometer project
Hi @dkonigs 😀 I just got my Printalyzer Densitometer and after first test I loved it! 🥰 Thank you and I'm waiting for Printalyzer Enlarging Timer!

However, a lot has happened since then and I figured it was time to give this upcoming product a thread of its own.
The UV/VIS Densitometer is most likely going to be my next released product. I expect to have pre-release units ready to send out in the coming weeks, with full production getting underway sometime this summer. Hopefully that means full availability by this fall.
The initial product page is now up on my company website, with a bunch of bullet-point details:

Printalyzer UV/VIS Densitometer — Dektronics
Okay, so with that out of the way, I might as well talk about what this thing is.
The Printalyzer UV/VIS Densitometer is going to be my next transmission/reflection densitometer product. On the exterior, it looks exactly like the current Printalyzer Densitometer. But on the inside, there are a lot of changes. New sensors, new LEDs, new optical path, new calibration methods.
The main headline feature is the addition of a UV transmission mode (using a 385nm UV LED light source and a UV-A sensitive light sensor), which should be able to give measurement results matching the old X-Rite 361T. It can probably maintain sufficiently accurate and repeatable measurements to higher UV densities, however, because of its light source.
For the "VIS" mode, I'm now using 3000K full-spectrum LEDs that more closely resemble the spectrum in the ISO 5 standards, combined with a light sensor that has a built-in Photopic filter. This may not make much of a difference versus the older product under most B&W measurement conditions, but it might help in some corner cases.
The optical path itself also has a number of improvements. Below the film, there is now a flashed opal diffuer (instead of matte acrylic) positioned to be in direct contact with the film. Above the film/paper, there is now a focusing lens which improves the precision of the measurement spot. This should make it easier to measure smaller patches on step wedges.
Finally, I've included a temperature sensor inside the optical sensor head, and am actually going to be doing thermal calibration and correction! Now I'll admit that the actual effect of ambient temperature on VIS measurements is miniscule, but for UV measurements its significant enough that you might notice a small change if you go between a cold house and a hot darkroom (or vice versa).
I've also been taking a good hard look at my options for calibration. While my current product is tracable to the Stouffer T5100C and R550C, for this one I wanted to take things a step further. As such, my current calibration plans for this new UV/VIS densitometer are:
- VIS Transmission - Tracable to NIST 38120C (formerly known as SRM 1008)
- UV Transmission - Tracable to a relatively new X-Rite 361-68 reference
- VIS Reflection - Most likely going to be tracable to a properly calibrated set of Spectralon references and/or BCRA tiles, falling back to an X-Rite 302-21 if that doesn't work out
That should be enough to get this thread started. Hopefully I'm not opening a whole can of worms here, but I know I probably am.
