So I've got a densitometer........ now what?

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I picked up a Nuclear Associates Victoreen Digital Densitometer II off Ebay for not too much, but at this point I can go no further. It turns on, and the number on the display increases when a denser portion of negative passes under the probe thingy but now I have no idea how to proceed. I'm going to re-read The Negative, but have a few questions until I get my hands on a copy. Does anyone know where I can find a manual for it, ideally in PDF form? How to I calibrate the darn thing? Thanks for the help with this!

- Justin

Edit: OK, I've found the manual so now I've got some bedtime reading.
 
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richard ide

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I am not familiar with that type. Is it transmission only or also reflection? I am going to check my Agfa densitometer in the darkroom. Back in 10
 

richard ide

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Hi,
I am back. Had to look as it has been a while. Mine has 2 adjustment screws for transmission and 2 for reflection. For reflection, I have a plastic card with a white and an 18% patch. For transmission you need (for calibration) a step wedge with 0 density and 2.00 density. The probe has a button for instant zeroing for use with film. It corrects for your light table illumination and film plus base fog. The any densities can be read. I have 2 of these units and never had to adjust the calibration. I used them commercially for 18 years. It was accurate up to a density of 4.5.
BTW the reflection calibration needs a .10 and a 2.00 density. A fixed ( no image) piece of photo paper will be very close to .10 and a solid black will be very close to 2.00
Now that I have thoroughly confused you, if you have any questions, I will try to answer them.

Regards

Richard
 
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It was designed for reading x-rays, so it is transmission and good for black and white film. It is supposed to come with little apertures to put over the light (3mm, 2mm, and 1mm) but these would be easy enough to fashion. This is a link to the manufacturer's page.

For calibration, would a sheet of film fixed and one exposed to room light developed and fixed work? Mine has a knob for zeroing.

- Justin
 
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richard ide

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Your manual should give you what you need to know. I hope
 
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Thanks! I've checked the manual and that seems to be the only thing I'll need (other than my little apertures, which I can make). Hooray for testing!

- Justin
 

JBrunner

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As others have said, but I'll put it in a nutshell. None of the numbers mean D*&^ S@#$ until you calibrate it. Nice score.
 

RobC

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well in transmission mode it should read zero with nothing in it. And in reflection mode it should read 0.7 with a kodak grey card in it. if it does either of those then its probably not far off.
 

dpurdy

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Generally, you zero the film base on the film you are measuring. Though I am not sure that means its completely accurate at higher densities. The problem with a densitometer that I am facing is no one local will repair it and the cost of shipping my macbeth is more than I am willing to pay.
 

RobC

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If you zero on the film base, then you can't measure fb+f so I'd say you are wrong about that.
 

dpurdy

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The idea is to remove the variable of film base fog and measure the exposure density. that is why you zero the film base. I am not wrong.
D
 

RobC

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so tell me how you measure fb+f then...
 

dpurdy

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You don't really need to know what the base fog is beyond doing a visual and noting that it looks normal. Say if you are using some Delta 3200 that has been out of the fridge for a month you notice that the base fog is way heavier than when it was fresh. It is good to inspect the base to look for weird fogging. But when you are trying to figure density then you set the densitometer so that the base plus fog equals zero then measure the areas of density you are concerned with. The use of the phrase xdensity+base fog is merely being accurate for the sake of being accurate. Xdensity is your concern. If you want to measure a zone 7 test then you zero the base and measure the test and it should read 1.2. That could be described as 1.2+base fog. But the + base fog is unnecessary in practical terms. Every film you measure is likely to have a slightly or greatly different base fog from the other film. So every time you go to measure a density of concern you must first zero the film base to remove the variable of the base fog... which theoretically has no real affect other than overall even increase in density. What you are trying to determine is contrast above base fog.

Dennis
 

RobC

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well as it happens I do want to know what fb+f is becuase it useful for telling me if something has changed with film or developer. And to test it I have to zero my densitometer with nothing in it. Fortunately for me I have Heiland and its as simple as pushing a button when I am reading with or without film in it, so it only takes a second or two to zero. But if I had densitometer which which required adjustment via screws or some other system then I might think that I would zero it with nothing in it because its pretty simple to subtract fb+f from any reading I make of actual zone negs.
 

dpurdy

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You are making it too hard. I think once you start doing it you will see what I am trying to say.
Have fun...DP
 

Nicholas Lindan

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A modern digital transmission densitometer that uses a microprocessor and A/D converter - anything made after 1977 or so - doesn't/shouldn't need calibration. A transmission densitometer measures how well something transmits light with respect to nothing - and nothing is, well, nothing - the absence of any calibration standard.

A transmission densitometer should self calibrate by taking two measurements from the photodiode with nothing in the densitometer's light path: one with it's light on (the 'blank' reading) and one with it's light off (the 'dark' reading).

Density is then:

OD = - log10 ((sample - dark) / (blank - dark))

Where 'sample' is the signal from the photodiode when it is measuring whatever it is measuring.

The story is different for reflection measurements - there calibration is needed as a reflection measurement is the ratio of the sample signal to something that is 100% reflective (or through mathematical juggling the ratio of the sample reading to a reading of something that is of a known reflective density).

If you don't need to share data with other densitometers it doesn't really matter what you calibrate the meter too as long as you always use the same thing. Using glossy photo paper if you calibrate to bright base white at 0.15 and blackest black at 2.3 you will be close enough that it really doesn't matter. 1.57 OD will be _your_ 1.57 OD: call it 1.57 MD (My Density). That 1.57 MD equals someone else's 1.68 OD doesn't matter a hoot because you are always comparing two things: how does your print compare to your black/white calibration photograph. If you use the manufacturer's calibration tablet you are just comparing your print to the manufacturer's tablet.

To extend on the self calibration theme - you can make a very usable Zone print step tablet by

o Using #2 1/2 glossy paper find the exposure for the first pure white and
the first black - the place where it doesn't get any whiter and the place
where it doesn't get any blacker.

o Using the settings from your f-stop timer (or a time stops chart) divide
the exposure range found above into 10 equal parts. If pure white was 3.3
stops on the timer/chart and pure black was 7.5 stops then each zone
step from white to black is .47 stops.

o Made a set of prints at zone step intervals. For the above example
make a set of prints at 3.3, 3.8, 4.2, 4.7, 5.2, 5.6, 6.1, 6.6, 7.1 and 7.5
stops of exposure.

o You now have a zone step tablet. Keep it on file and use it for comparing
it's tones to your prints' tones.

Adams defines zones as the tones resulting from breaking the HD curve into ten equal expsoures. So you actually have a _true_ zone system tablet.

The same thing can be done for negatives to make a transmission zone step tablet, but you have to decide what you want black (the black part of the negative) to be - it is a good idea to pick a black that makes a pure white with #2 1/2 paper when a just-barely there density in the negative produces a blackest black on the print.

Older analog densitometers usually have lots of little fiddly adjustments because analog isn't very good at math and analog logarithmic circuits are very sensitive to temperature fluctuations (and any other event that may come along). The same is true of quasi-digital densitometers made before 1973 that have analog circuits but a digital display instead of the older meter/needle movement . '73-77 vintage digitals can go either way - uProcessor or analog signal processing.
 
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Kino

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You are making it too hard. I think once you start doing it you will see what I am trying to say.
Have fun...DP

But then, when the fog level goes wonkers for some reason, and you don't have much experience with a densitometer OR visually inspecting negatives, then you get an undeclared variable that wrecks havoc on calculations.

Ongoing B+F measurement is a good indicator of processing drift and chemical exhaustion.
 

Chuck_P

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I have trouble with the phrase "zeroing the film base"; zero the densitometer, calibrate, then read the film base.

My x-rite 301 is a transmission densitometer and it requires nulling, or zeroing with no film, then it requires calibrating by measuring a known denisty to see if the measurement calibrates, i.e., to read +/- .02 of the known calibration reference. It it does not read to within that tolerance, them I can adust it to do so, then repeat the calibration to see how it reads. When it is calibrated, simply read the fb+f of the film and there you have it. IMO, I think you should buy an already "calibrated" step tablet and use that as the known reference value; seems to me that if you get an uncalibrated tablet, then you won't be sure that your densitometer is actually reading correctly because the tablet itself is not calibrated. It may provide you with a density but how do you know it is correct unless the density you read is within a known reference value according to its tolerance?

This is just my own thinking on it---I'm not an electronics expert. I have since tested some film with it and things are doing fine.

Chuck
 

dancqu

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Tobias TB+ Autozero

I've a Tobias TB+. It will autozero on the first reading
taken after turn on. So fb+f is measured by first zeroing
on nothing. To rezero for image density readings,
read fb+f then press the 'store' switch. Only
densities above fb+f will display. Dan
 

RobC

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sounds very similar to a heiland. Extremely easy to use and does both transmission and reflected.

densitometers are great learning tools and once you know what you are doing they can save a lot of testing time. But they can also lead you to become a slave to numbers. For example, AA said logD 1.3 for zone VIII on diffusion enlargers. I wonder how many people have actually tested that 1.3 is the correct value for their normal paper and their chosen number of 1 stop zones with normal film development. My guess is very very few of them. They use AAs numbers without question and use the densitometer to confirm their faith. This is foolhardy. You must calculate where Zone VIII should be for your working methods, equipment and materials. You may be surprised at the results.
 

Kino

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Yeah, I used to only use them to prove there was a problem and NOT to prove that it was done correctly.

Even then, they can be very helpful.
 
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So I'm going to get a step wedge for calibration from Stouffer, as well as some microwave dinners. Would the 21 step wedge in .15 density increments with a dmax of 3.05 be sufficient, or should I go for the 31 step wedge in .10 density increments? Or even the 41 step wedge in .10 density increments with a dmax of 4.05? Also, what is the difference between Standard, Calibrated, and Calibrated & Certified?

Thanks so much for all the help everyone, I'm hoping that once I get the densitometer working properly and find my personal film speed and development times that I'll be able to avoid situations like the one I'm in now, with a gorgeous negative but a bulletproof sky.

- Justin
 

Kino

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21 step should be fine for most purposes -- The difference is the exactitude of traceability to recognized standards; you pay more for accuracy in density graduations between steps.

However, you can buy the standard and it will work perfectly fine for your purposes, just be sure to measure and note the densities on the scale, they won't be perfectly uniform, but will suffice for your (and just about anybody's) needs.
 
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