It's really very simple and takes almost longer to explain than to do:
1- I removed the clip bars from the standard glassless holder. They are just a snap-in and quite easy to remove without damage.
2-The moveable side of the holder was positioned so that the ANglass pieces fit snuggly between it and the stationary one. The catch was then snugged in so the moveable side won't get out of its place.
3- I got two ANglass pieces from
Dead Link Removed. They have them the right size for a MF 9000 standard holder, refer to the holder model number. Thickness is 1mm each.
4- Into the modified standard holder goes one glass piece, AN side down, as the bottom. Film strip goes on top of that, emulsion side down against the non-AN side. The second glass piece goes on top of the film, AN side down, against the shiny side of the film. The lot is held together against the holder with two pieces of adhesive duct tape at the ends - don't ask me which brand, it was just lying around in a roll - and that is pretty much it.
I do press
very lightly with a piece of paper towel on top of the lot before taping it down, to make sure there is good contact and the film is reasonably flat.
Unless the film is a basket case, I usually get focus within 5 units across each entire 6X7 frame.
If anything is not clear, let me know and I'll take a photo of the thing and post it up somewhere for you to have a look.
But it's really as simple as I described it. With films with glossy emulsion sides like Astia, I need to turn the bottom piece AN-side up otherwise I get rings there too. That sometimes can interfere with the AF, so in those cases there is a little bit more work getting the focus right.
Of course it goes without saying: everything must be scrupulously clean and dustless. I use a little "pear" to blow clean air during each step and avoid touching the glass with fingers: I use a paper towel to handle them and the film.
Now, modifying the standard 35mm holder of the 9000 to take AN glass,
THAT was a hard nut to crack. It's done now, same results. But I had to remember some of my earlier modeling years and some of my brass bar soldering skills...
