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Processing 110 / 16mm film format

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delphine

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Hi all,

I will probably have to process 10+ rolls format 110 in a month time. This would be a one-off.
110 film reel are pretty hard to come by, and expensive when they do. Also, I'd spend a lot of time process each film one by one if I was getting a reel.
I am wondering whether there is not another solution to process the rolls. Could they be tray processed?

Any ideas welcome.

Best

D
 
I've processed them in 2 different ways.

1, with a 16mm jobo reel (pretty cheap) dremeled out slightly in the center with a sanding bit to fit a paterson column for a paterson tank, works great.

And, in the 120 cartridge holder in the 120 lane on a fuji frontier C-41 processor, the machine also detects it as 110 size.
 
I have successfully processed 16mm short lengths in a normal metal tank. My method is to tape the 16mm film, emulsion side out, onto a previously-processed "junk" roll of 120 film. I tape both ends of the 16mm film down on the larger roll of 120, leaving only a little slack; obviously this is done in total darkness but it's not difficult. Then I load the 120 film onto a stainless-steel reel and put it in the tank. I process it as if it was a roll of 120. Uses a bit more chemistry that the 16mm film needs, but it works. I think you could do a couple 16mm rolls per 120 roll.

Now if my 16mm camera didn't have a dozen light-leaks, I'd be all set.

EDIT - I tried this trick by taping 16mm film to 35mm film and it did not work, the film was too close together.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
The Yankee Clipper II reel adjusts to 110 size; although the quality of this product is so-so (the plastic is quite brittle compared to others), it will work if handled gently. If you can find replacement reels inexpensively, you can use multiple reels in a tray w/o the tanks in total darkness to process several at one time.

There's a Nikor 16mm reel on ebay currently. If I were doing 110, I'd buy that one.
 
The Jobo 135/120 reel can be modified to take 16mm film.

I think I posted on this in the past.
 
Lots of great advice ! thank you all, that is helpful.

The reference to the vintage article posted by Ian is a great find !
 
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