[pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- From: Dennis Purdy <dlp4777@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: pure-silver@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Mon, 29 Sep 2008 19:56:48 -0700
I think the really odd ball step is brilliant. That is what I would do.
Dennis
On Sep 29, 2008, at 19:49, Ken Hart1 wrote:
From: "Shannon Stoney" <shannonstoney@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
I have a question about the new darkroom that I'm building in a garage
in my back yard.
My old darkroom was a box inside a garage. The floor was a concrete
slab.
In the new darkroom, we had a wooden floor built on top of the slab,
because the slab was so uneven. The walls are now tied in with the
floor, and there is a vent hood mounted on one wall, with a fan on a
shelf next to the hood to pull air through the vent hood. In the old
darkroom, the vibration from the fan vibrated the wall, but not the
enlarger, because the enlarger sat on a table on the concrete slab.
Today I suddenly got worried that the vibration from the vent fan on
the vent hood over the sink would vibrate the floor, because now the
floor is tied in with the wall. Then if the floor vibrates, the table
that the enlarger sits on might vibrate also.
So, what should I do to prevent this from happening?
--shannon
Easy step: get some sort of rubber 'feet' for the table-- possibly the
devices that are sold to put under furniture legs to make the
furniture easy to move. Or just a couple thicknesses of chunks of an
old auto tire. Maybe even some chunks of thick rubber-back carpet-- a
carpet installer would surely have some scrap pieces.
More difficult step: Isolate the fan. It sounds like the fan is an
ordinary box fan-- if so, instead of setting it on a shelf, hang it by
some rubber bungee cords. If it's a permanently mounted fan, mount it
with rubber straps. Cut some strips from the sidewall of an old tire.
Fasten the strips to the wall and mount the fan to the loose end of
the strips.
Really oddball step: Cut holes throu the floor where the table legs
are and have the table setting directly on the concrete floor slab.
This would lower the table by the thickness of the 'sleepers' used for
the floor, but depending on your enlarger, it might even by more
convenient!
High tech solution: mount auto air shocks on each leg of the table.
Using a valve system and air compressor, you could raise and lower the
table to a comfortable working height-- add more air to raise the
table for small prints, release air pressure to lower the table for
big prints. Of course, now you have to deal with vibration and
electical surge from the air compressor.
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- References:
- [pure-silver] Drying prints in blotter roll
- From: Bogdan Karasek
- [pure-silver] Re: Drying prints in blotter roll
- From: Richard Knoppow
- [pure-silver] Re: Drying prints in blotter roll
- From: Nicholas O. Lindan
- [pure-silver] Delta Pro 400 in DD-X
- From: ERoustom
- [pure-silver] floor vibration?
- From: Shannon Stoney
- [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- From: Ken Hart1
Other related posts:
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- » [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
From: "Shannon Stoney" <shannonstoney@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
I have a question about the new darkroom that I'm building in a garage in my back yard. My old darkroom was a box inside a garage. The floor was a concrete slab. In the new darkroom, we had a wooden floor built on top of the slab, because the slab was so uneven. The walls are now tied in with the floor, and there is a vent hood mounted on one wall, with a fan on a shelf next to the hood to pull air through the vent hood. In the old darkroom, the vibration from the fan vibrated the wall, but not the enlarger, because the enlarger sat on a table on the concrete slab. Today I suddenly got worried that the vibration from the vent fan on the vent hood over the sink would vibrate the floor, because now the floor is tied in with the wall. Then if the floor vibrates, the table that the enlarger sits on might vibrate also. So, what should I do to prevent this from happening? --shannon
Easy step: get some sort of rubber 'feet' for the table-- possibly the devices that are sold to put under furniture legs to make the furniture easy to move. Or just a couple thicknesses of chunks of an old auto tire. Maybe even some chunks of thick rubber-back carpet-- a carpet installer would surely have some scrap pieces.
More difficult step: Isolate the fan. It sounds like the fan is an ordinary box fan-- if so, instead of setting it on a shelf, hang it by some rubber bungee cords. If it's a permanently mounted fan, mount it with rubber straps. Cut some strips from the sidewall of an old tire. Fasten the strips to the wall and mount the fan to the loose end of the strips.
Really oddball step: Cut holes throu the floor where the table legs are and have the table setting directly on the concrete floor slab. This would lower the table by the thickness of the 'sleepers' used for the floor, but depending on your enlarger, it might even by more convenient!
High tech solution: mount auto air shocks on each leg of the table. Using a valve system and air compressor, you could raise and lower the table to a comfortable working height-- add more air to raise the table for small prints, release air pressure to lower the table for big prints. Of course, now you have to deal with vibration and electical surge from the air compressor. ======================================================================= ====================================== To unsubscribe from this list, go to www.freelists.org and logon to your account (the same e-mail address and password you set-up when you subscribed,) and unsubscribe from there.
- [pure-silver] Drying prints in blotter roll
- From: Bogdan Karasek
- [pure-silver] Re: Drying prints in blotter roll
- From: Richard Knoppow
- [pure-silver] Re: Drying prints in blotter roll
- From: Nicholas O. Lindan
- [pure-silver] Delta Pro 400 in DD-X
- From: ERoustom
- [pure-silver] floor vibration?
- From: Shannon Stoney
- [pure-silver] Re: floor vibration?
- From: Ken Hart1