PlasticSpanner said:
How do I use the scale? Is it just a conversion scale?
My Durst has about 4. I've never managed to find out exactly what their relationship to anything is. All manufacturers are somewhat vague on the subject. But to be honest I've not put that much effort into finding out.
I do know that the scales are also used for calculating enlargement factors when using the enlarger as a copy stand (a lot of enlargers will allow you to do this).
The best way that I have found is to do a series of test strips with the enlarger at various heights. Use the most appropriate scale - or use a tape measure.
Either use a test neg or no neg.
Stop the lens down to f8 maybe, and set the enlarger head to give the full frame size of your standard print. I do 10x8 but it's up to you.
Do a test strip as a step wedge, giving increases along the lines of 2-3-4-6-8-..
You may have to play with the lens aperture or the intervals but what you are after is a good grey scale.
Mark the position on your column with some indication of what it means. I use x1.
Move the head up the column half as much again (1.5x).
Do a step wedge with the same intervals.
You should find that the 2 sec exposure on the first strip is the same as the 4 on the second. The others should show a doubling too.
Mark it on the column 1.5x - or something.
Do the same for 2x the height, 1/2x the height and so on.
As long as you standardise your processing and take care you should be able to do 1/2 even 1/3rd stop intervals.
If you normally print a different size then start with that and do the same sequence. You will get a different scale but the principle is the same.
You can do the same for 6x6 negs, 6x7 and 5x4. Just make sure you mark them clearly so you know the difference.
In use you choose the scale that corresponds to the enlargement you are doing. If you make the image bigger (or smaller) just read off the exposure mod factor and adjust.
You don't have to do the test strip - you can just use an accurate tape measure and a calculator. But I did the test strip to make sure there were no problems or inaccuracies in the system.
It's a bit of a fag and it will take a while but I found it worth it in time and paper savings.
I standardised my negs too so I could put one in, put the head on a mark, stop the lens to f8 and the exposure time was the same (or near as damn it) every time.
You can do a similar calibration for paper grade too.
Get a standard neg and just move the head up (and down) in measured stages doing test strips on the grades to see when it's appropriate to change.
PlasticSpanner said:
What is an unacceptably long exposure? I did a huge crop which meant the exposure was 8 minutes!
Hard to say. Paper has quite a low speed and is designed for longish exposures but I think 8 mins would be getting there. Emulsions only obey Bunsen-Roscoe within a small window. It's just that reciprocity failure effects are not immediately obvious.