[rollei_list] Re: RPA... and Rollei plate adaptor
- From: Robert Lilley <54moggie@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: rollei_list@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Tue, 31 Mar 2009 08:27:24 -0400
I don't consider 6x9 cm film a lost cause, I use that format all the
time.
Rob
On Mar 31, 2009, at 2:04 AM, Emmanuel Bigler wrote:
From Carlos Manuel: >
> I also would like to experiment loading film sheets to the camera
and
> developing them, these are new things to me.
Believe me or not, Carlos, but this 6.5x9 plate adaptor accessory
is, after the ever-ready case, the UV filter and the selenium meter,
one of the first R-TLR accessories I bought 32 years ago !
The user's manual can be summarised as follows (not for Carlos who
owns the complete Prochnow, Parker, Evans Rollei-Bibles, plus the
whole archive of this list ;-) but for other readers following the
same route ;-)
- yes, do use 6.5x9cm films or plates i.e. 3-1/2 by 2-1/2 inches,
not the "American" size 2x3" (2-1/4 by 3-1/4)
- do not forget the intermediate spacer-plate for holding cut film
if you do not use glass plates ;-)
- do not forget to check that the film plate back is.. back when
inserting !
- do not forget to release the film plate in order to bring it to
the film gate and bring it back after taking the picture;
- and... do not forget to take the dark slide off before bringing
the film to the film gate and taking the picture; and to slide it
back before re-insertng the dark slide and taking the film holder
off the camera ;-)
In order to keep my light-tight plushes or felts as fresh as
possible, I keep my empty film holers with the dark slide removed
and I do not keep a film holder in the film back (this last thing
would be a really weird things, but with Rollei TLRs everything
looks weird nowdays ;-)
In order to process the films, at the beginning I simply used my
faithful Paterson 135/120 tank, without the film reel but with the
central light-tight column, you can place two 6.5x9 films back-to-
back on both sides of the column. The only problem is that nothing
prevents the film to slide "up" when reversing the tank upside down.
So be generous with the amount of developer you use.
I do not know the Domi-Plan tank but I now have a Combi-Plan which
accommodates various formats from 6.5x9 to 4x5" including 9x12 and
even the "small" 3x4 polaroids 665 films (discontinued ! sigh !) by
cheating on spacer rings.
(in the good old days this tank was named : the Gepe Combi Plan, now
it is known as the HP Combi Plan, not for HP the former pocket
calculator company but for "HP Marketing", the foto distributor
famous German brands in the States, actually a subsidiary of... the
Swedish GEPE company !)
all the best and have fun with 6.5x9 film, another of the Lost
Causes of Photography in the XXI-st century ! ;-)
--
Emmanuel
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