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Thread: 20th Century Camera Developing reels

  1. #1

    Join Date
    Apr 2020
    Posts
    300

    20th Century Camera Developing reels

    I haven't seen a lot of information on these reels, and only occasional references to them, so I thought I'd post a mini-review after using one for the first time.

    Site: https://20thcenturycamera.com/collections/film-reels

    The reels are partially 3D printed, and partially industrial plastic. The ends are sturdy, the arms are flexible, and probably won't stand up to abuse-- but neither will the film you're loading, so that's probably not an issue.

    The ends of the reel have flat edges-- at least for the 4x5 reel, this makes it easy to lay the reel on it's side, and slide the film (emulsion down) into the easy to find slots.

    Once the film is in the slot, you can press on the edge of the film to slide it into place. To retain the film, the slots end in a V notch, and the opposite edge of the film is held in place by the slightly springy arm, which has a hook on the end. This also forces the film into a slight curve that keeps the emulsion surface from touching the plastic. To remove the film, press lightly on the edge of the negative until the hook lets go, and the negative will "pop" out a bit as it straightens, making it easy to remove.

    This is as opposed to the mod-54 design where you "taco" the sheet into notches on each arm-- my complaint with this design is it looks too easy to get the wrong notch in the dark. If there's a way to screw something up, I will find it, so I try to avoid such designs.

    After a few practice loads in the light, and then with eyes closed, it was easy to load in the dark.

    The reel fits nicely in the Paterson System 4 tank, and was easy to develop with-- although the requirement for 1L of chemical is... painful, unless your chemicals are plentiful and cheap. It takes 950ml to fully submerge the reel in the tank.

    The SP-445 is more efficient (half the chemicals for 2/3's the film), but the biggest advantage for me, is it holds one grafmatic worth of film.

    The other nice thing is that since it's 3D printed, it's very easy for 20th Century Camera to offer other sizes-- anything from 2.25x3.25 up to 8x10, including 9x12.

    All in all, I'm pleased with it, and will definitely use it again.

  2. #2

    Join Date
    Jan 2021
    Posts
    65

    Re: 20th Century Camera Developing reels

    After practicing loading this thing a few times, I felt pretty confident. But I managed to misload a sheet or two and lost a few images. I have since used it a few more times and gotten it right. I bought it because Rollei RPX 25 4x5 is on a really thin base. I had major problems with it in my tank. This is what led me to search for all the alternatives. I even called Jeff (20th Century Camera) and he laughed and said that film is what led him to design this! It’s a super sharp film on a thin base so it does not act as a lens. I would imagine that ADOX 25 is super thin, too. Problem solved although I will go back to the tank for Tmax because I can do 8 sheets per run. I can’t say that this solves all of my 4x5 processing problems, but it’s another tool for the right job. Just my.02.

  3. #3

    Join Date
    Oct 2015
    Posts
    1,581

    Re: 20th Century Camera Developing reels

    I have enjoyed using my 4x5 reel. Easy to load and does what it's supposed to. I don't mind the 1L worth of chemistry required.

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