Won't agitate for you but would you pay $100 to free up table space for tempering your chemicals?
https://cinestillfilm.com/collection...essing-at-home
Won't agitate for you but would you pay $100 to free up table space for tempering your chemicals?
https://cinestillfilm.com/collection...essing-at-home
"Sex is like maths, add the bed, subtract the clothes, divide the whoo hoo and hope you don't multiply." - Leather jacket guy
Yes, but I didn't see the voltage/amps required.
Tin Can
Looks like a modified Sous Vide heater...
The Viewfinder is the Soul of the Camera
If you don't believe it, look into an 8x10 viewfinder!
Dan
how is this modified for film use ? all it needs to do is heat and maintain temp...
notch codes ? I only use one film...
ah thanks. wonder f people are buying these things or not ? I've used Devtec heaters before but they don't go low, which is fine for me.
notch codes ? I only use one film...
Price is not bad considering some other alternatives. I have the traditional Jobo TBE-2 Tempering bath that holds 12 extra bottles for my CPP-2 processor. They were expensive then and now. Looks like the going ebay price is about $500. BTW the TBE-2 has no motor; convection only.
Of course, even for B&W, heating is the way to go. If you ask my highly biased opinion as a Jobo user since the 1980s "Cooling to 68F" has been on its way out the door since T-max developer was introduced in the early 1980s. Things go in cycles, maybe affordable solid-state cooling will be a thing in a few years and "68F" may come back in style.
For example are any young photographers today really running a continuous stream of 68F tap water while processing B&W like I did in the basement sink and in the college darkroom in all through the 1970s?
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