emtor
Member
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2010
- Messages
- 62
- Format
- Medium Format
I purchased a stainless steel 120-reel which ruined four rolls of Velvia film.
Contradictory to advice I fixed it by using brute force. A piece of hardwood between the sides, and pressure from a vice applied to the outside to straighten the reel up. Loaded roll number five this evening which took me thirty seconds in the dark. Result: Evenly developed film,-no frames ruined.
If anyone has SS-reels that seem impossible to load, measure the distance between the sides. Most likely the distance is not even all around the reel. If it is not, it will never load the film properly. Measure the thickness of the spiral-thread and multiply by two. The width of your film minus the resulting number equals the correct distance between the sides. Arching the film when you load it will ensure proper seating when the film straightens out inside the reel.
Contradictory to advice I fixed it by using brute force. A piece of hardwood between the sides, and pressure from a vice applied to the outside to straighten the reel up. Loaded roll number five this evening which took me thirty seconds in the dark. Result: Evenly developed film,-no frames ruined.
If anyone has SS-reels that seem impossible to load, measure the distance between the sides. Most likely the distance is not even all around the reel. If it is not, it will never load the film properly. Measure the thickness of the spiral-thread and multiply by two. The width of your film minus the resulting number equals the correct distance between the sides. Arching the film when you load it will ensure proper seating when the film straightens out inside the reel.