this is crazy, i never even knew these things existed.
this is crazy, i never even knew these things existed.
I'm about to buy a RH f/stop timer but am as of yet undecided between the analyzer pro or the StopClock pro. I do like the idea of dials, especially as described by aduncanson, and wish they would go to that as well as putting in a f/stop scale differential in a larger screen - but I would still like to have the actual time.
They seem to be a great company - something kind of rare.
To find the answers - question them!
I think both RH and DA are great companies who design good products and who provide good support.
I have always been fascinated by analyzers thinking that I might measure my way to a good print. But for me, it just does not work that way and offers extra layers of complexity that bog down the process. I am going to do some test exposures no matter what the analyzer says and I know the neighborhood of a base exposure anyway. If I were a production printer and had to crank out many decent prints for a living, then an analyzer would be great. But for trying to make the finest print that I can, I have never found an analyzer to be very helpful (color work is different though). So I use the StopClock Pro for those reasons.
Claimer: As most know, I am the owner of Darkroom Automation and the designer of the Darkroom Automation timer and meter. Comparisons of features of the RH and DA systems are based on my best knowledge, are certainly subject to correction, and are not intended to be in any way misleading.
Thanks, it is always nice to have a convert.
As you say, it is a lot easier to look at the display and see that 3.7 is half a stop more exposure than 3.2 stops. At least, I certainly find it so.
I have never understood why the RH timers display seconds.
Queen Isabella to Columbus: “Sail West? How amusing. Nobody has asked for money to do that before.”
Enough of the cheeky stuff.
It doesn’t really matter. Though for those of a binary bent the answer is that 3 stops is 2^3 seconds or 8 seconds and so 3.2 stops is at a guess around 9 to 10 seconds; 4 stops is 16 seconds, 5 is 32, etc. etc..
It’s not the time that matters but the exposure. Paper doesn’t care about time, per se, but about how much exposure it gets.
Think about it, what does it matter if the timer says 15 seconds? OK, so you know that you don’t have time for a cup of coffee, but apart from that issue you just set the timer to whatever it takes to expose the paper. Just what that number is has no other relevance - it’s just a number you set on the timer to get a good print. If you have an RH compensating timer for your cold-light head then setting the timer to 15 can result in a 10 second exposure with a ‘hot’ cold light or take 45 seconds with a frozen and shivering lamp. The 15 is just so many units of exposure (and just happens to correspond to the time in seconds for an average lamp temperature).
The Darkroom Automation system works completely in stops of exposure. The light intensity reading from the meter is in stops. Add the light intensity reading on the meter to the timer setting and one has the total exposure in stops. Any combination of meter reading and timer setting that adds to the same exposure produces the same tone on the paper. For the curious, a light intensity resulting in a reading of 10.0 on the meter produces max black on MGIV RC in 0.0 stops (1 second); a meter reading of 9.0 indicates it will take 1.0 stops (2 seconds), a reading of 8.0 will take 2.0 stops (4 seconds), and a reading of 0.1 says it will take 9.9 stops (955 seconds or 15+ minutes [reciprocity will of course come into play...] and you will have time for that cup of coffee after all).
The Darkroom Automation timer shows and counts down seconds when it makes an exposure - but the feature is more a ‘pacifier’, like the progress bar on a computer.
The DA timer has a dodging feature. If you want to dodge by 1/3 of a stop you enter “d0.3”, insert the dodger and hit the expose button. Less keystrokes than counting out 1/6ths -- and the timer remembers what you did for when you make the next print. I believe the RH timer does somewhat the same thing but you have to do dodges as sort of inside-out burns. The DA timer breaks up multiple dodges so you can do a 2 stop dodge followed by a 3 stop dodge without any jiggery-pokery - something no other system will do.
Exactly - it’s just a number indicating exposure.
So it is a matter of which you find more convenient: stops or seconds.
To my mind if you are working in stops - it is an f-Stop timer after all - then a display in stops makes the most sense and is the more useful.
Or enter “b0.3” and press the footswitch or expose button - each exposures will burn 0.3 stops over the base exposure. No more keystrokes required - just move the burning card and tap the footswitch for each edge. Possibly the RH design is similar?
You can also use the timer's memory mode and save keystrokes print-to-print by programming a series of base exposure, dodge and burn sequences (and if you are so inclined a split grade filter change and a second set of base/dodge/burn exposures). Each press of the expose key/footswitch makes the exposure and advances to the next dodge or burn. I understand some RH timers have a similar feature.
Very good point.
0.1 stop of resolution means you are never more than 1/20th of a stop away from the optimum exposure. If the optimum sits between two 1/10ths then you are either 1/20th too light or 1/20th too dark. With 1/24ths you are never off more than 1/48th of a stop. Though if you have to add 2 stops by pressing the key once for each fraction of a stop it can be a drag - which is likely why most users seem to find 1/6ths convenient and adequate. An advantage to showing stops directly is one doesn’t have to count key presses and it allows the keys to ramp the exposure up and down.
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The two systems take different approaches to solving the same problem. Though Richard likes to debate the point, the Darkroom Automation system is less automated(*), takes a bit more effort to use, offers more direct insight and control, and is the ‘stoppier’ of the two.
When used with the paper speed charts the Darkroom Automation system allows precise tone placement, with exposure and paper grade matched to the important points in the image. Many systems pick grade and exposure on the shadow and highlights with the result that the areas of interest get a lot of dodging and burning to get them in line. The opposite should be true - the areas of interest should match the paper and exposure and it is the shadows and highlights that should get the dodging and burning.
The Darkroom Automation system uses the actual HD curves for each paper. The response curve for a paper isn't any sort of ideal 'S' curve but is more like the mogul run on a ski course - full of dips and bumps. Only a system that uses the actual paper data for the whole curve can allow precise placement of midtones with concomitant determination of paper grade. If it is the highlights that are important the system can find the optimum paper grade for fitting the highlights, if the shadows the system can determine the best paper for the shadow contrast. A system that bases itself on two-point calibration only at one tone in the shadows and one tone in the highlights can not do an adequate job.
It is possible to use the DA system with its paper speed charts with any timer or meter. Of course, it works best with the equipment it was designed for.
As the saying goes: You pays your money and you takes your choice...
Darkroom Automation Web Page
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* What can I say, the name was picked before the product concept was formed.
Hi, Nick! Before I bought the RH Designs Analyzer Pro, I really gave serious thought to your product. No, really!
The reason I went with RHD over DA is because of the built-in densiometer. Is it a highly precise tool? No, but it gets the job done very nicely. I had been printing using a Beseler enlarging meter and a Gralab 900. I made a little test strip maker out of some cardboard so I could expose the same strip image.
Now, I grab the meter, read a number of points from the negative, and then push a few buttons and print.
Here's a thought: why not make a model with a USB connection? Then it could be connected to a notebook or iPhone, and publish the API. That would be a great hit, as people would be writing software for your product. That would be leaps and bounds in front of everybody.
Nicholas,
Thanks for taking the time to clarify all of those points. Very helpful.
In regard to my comments about dodging in seconds. That is a holdover of my pre-f-stop printing days. A lot of times when I do my test strips I can see that I want to dodge the face by 2/6 of a stop. After I judge my base exposure, I figure out how many seconds I need to dodge and don't really use timer functions for that.
I did not realize that your timer displays seconds in addition to stops. I think that is a great feature to have both.
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