I have been following form afar, but can you give a brief synopsis of the current setup as it looks like refinements have been done since I first saw this.
The tank does not spin, the reels spin in the tank (YES?)
What type of reels will fit?
How is temp. regulated, is there a water bath?
Is there a cleaning cycle or what to do between sessions?
Are you using a roller pump, or do the chemicals go into the pump mechanism?
Even though I have a Jobo CPP2, it would be nice to have something that can be setup and taken down quickly for one or two rolls of film.
Thanks
ic-racer I've replied to your comments above in bold. The Chromabox-4 is much smaller than the JOBO CPP2 and because it doesn't use a water bath to heat chemicals it doesn't take a long time to get up to temperature, so it should be perfect for doing a few rolls here and there. I'd imagine the CPP would be better if you wanted to do a lot of film at once or some prints or really large negatives. Because the Chromabox-4 is fully automatic too you just need to push the button and walk away, during testing I'm often running the machine through a cycle while I'm doing something else around the house.
Coming up on the 1 year anniversary of starting the project, I've had a lot of life getting in the way recently and that always takes precedence but now I'm trying to get back on track and have made a new blog post of my recent progress.
http://midtonemachines.com/news/level-sensors-at-last/
I finally got the floating level switches I ordered and 3D printed a prototype of the new heating tank, everything going well so far. I need to get back into modifying the firmware but programming really isn't my favourite task so it's hard to get started (once I'm doing it I don't mind so much though).
Thank you for taking time to answer the questions. Congratulations on the anniversary.
Mike, the heating tank is just over 600mL of chemicals, enough for 4 rolls of film. From what I've seen the break-even point of injection molding when compared to other techniques such as resin casting is about 300 parts, I'm not sure how many of these machines I could sell but for the time being I'm assuming there won't be enough demand to make injection molding cost effective (would be great if I were wrong though!).
600mL that makes sense. I wonder what kind of educational market there is for something like this????
E6 market seems to no longer require mounting slides. For a camera shop that still processes C-41 with a minilab, but sends out E6 and black and white this might be a good idea.
It really looks neat, good luck.
Best Regards Mike
New blog post is up, I've had a 'version 2' of the sheet metal parts manufactured and moved all of the prototype machine components onto that, looks a lot cleaner now and is super sturdy! I have to make some design changes to the heating tank again so that it drains better, but that's the beauty of being able to 3D print functional parts during prototyping.
http://midtonemachines.com/news/sheetmetal-version-2/
http://midtonemachines.com/news/bits-and-pieces/
New blog post up, new heating tank that's working well, some ease-of-use firmware updates, getting some parts injection moulded etc. I've also added the ability to send the used chemical from any channel to any other channel, which allows for even easier replenishment without any external hardware.
For a gallery of my work and to buy prints, please visit my website:
www.andrewburnsnz.com
Or for information about the Midtone Machines automatic film developer:
Midtone Machines
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