Any roller base of appropriate size should work. Or you just gently roll a drum back and forth in a darkroom sink.
Photolab only does 35mm and 120 in house. They sent the rest to SF. But now their provider had to relocate and only has space for one dip n dunk machine big enough for 8X10, and decided on E6. The other machine is in storage. This happened just a couple months ago. I used Photolab because it was only 5min from my office, and with their dollar surchage, it still came out to only $7 per sheet for 8x10 processing. I turned down a ton (literally, several tons) of free processing gear from a retired big local lab - no place to put it; and high-volume machines need to be steadily fed. But I don't know if there are even any 8X10 color shooters on this side of the Bay anymore. And I'm increasingly resorting to 4X5 for color because the cost of replacing my 8x10 stash would be triple now.
Let me underline that Photolab still handles 4x5 C41, but sent out with about a week turnaround.
Yeah, I'm considering the option in San Clemente. Just don't want to thaw any 8x10 color film right now. Have plenty of black and white work to do first.
Citizens Photo in Portland OR. Dedicated Dip and dunk line for C41 and E6 up to 8x10
http://www.citizensphoto.com/processing/
I use the Arista c41 kit from freestyle. It’s one gallon for $70. Pretty good deal.
For E6 I use the Fuji hunt 5L kit for $199. (There are definitely cheaper kits, but I’ve had weird things happen with the 3-bath E6 kit. )
For drums I use the Jobo expert drums (3010 for 4x5 And 3005 for 8x10)
For c41, Once in a while I get some spots on the film where it has stuck to the drum on the backside, and all that means is I need to re-fix for a minute or two in a tray, so I just collect the fixer from the drum in a tray and re-fix the ones that have some blue blotches of silver halide that was not removed from the places where it stuck to the back of the drum. It’s never ruined a negative.
Same goes for E6, but it happens less often with the Fuji hunt kits. But if you get yellow spots on the E6 film you just need to re-bleach for a little while and then re-fix.
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Dodge-Chrome in DC area does C41,E-6 and BW up 8x10. https://www.dodgechrome.com/
full disclosure: I work there but not in film processing lab.
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