Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/02/03

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Subject: Re: [Leica] Enlarging lens- user survey?
From: RBedw51767@aol.com
Date: Wed, 3 Feb 1999 04:45:06 EST

I am a novice in the darkroom and I am now adicted to hypo.  Following is my
list of equipment but some of it will change soon thanks to many of you
contributing your time and input on the subject.  Thanks to everyone.

Omega C760Xl
Cold Light Head
50mm F2.8 Rodagon
80 mm F2.8 Rodagon
50mm F4 El Nikkor
80mm F2.8 El Nikkor

I am seriously looking to upgrade my 6 months old enlarger to a 4x5.  I don't
know which one to purchase and this time. 

Thanks,

Bob



<< 
 > >Kip Babington wrote:
 > >
 > >> > Maybe we can do a small survey amongst the LUGgers to see how many
 are actually doing their own printing.
 > 
 
 Here is the darkroom collection from about the last dozen years. This has
 to be a  complete list, since my little darkroom won't hold anything more!
 
 Focomat V35 with Vario and Color heads, Focotar 40/2.8 and Focometer.
 Focomat 1c Color with Focotar 50/4.5 (in the garage now, but soon to be
 revived  with a dichro color head).
 Belfort Instrument Company "EN-52(B-1) 4x5" - looks like an Omega D3 made
 as an early Simon Brothers government contract - anybody know its history?
 Schneider Componon 105/5.6 and EL-Nikkor 135/5.6.
 Jobo CPE-2.
 Ilford CAP40 Cibachrome processor.
 Besler PM2M color analyzer that I use with the Bob Mitchell Colorbrator.
 And my latest addition, get this  - a Philadelphia Air Transport Company
 Model F-213 Film Developer, made in about 1955, brand new in the unopened
 box. It processes up to 100 feet of 70mm film on a motorized spool winder.
 And it works great, even on 15 feet of 70mm E-6 chromes that I did about a
 week ago. 
 
 Most printing over the last six months has been Ciba/Ilfochrome work, which
 has been slowly improving to the level of my B&W skills. I owe what I know
 in B&W to the wonderful Focomat IIc, my faithful workhorse from when I
 worked in the darkroom of Sweden's largest publishing company 30 years ago.
 Actually, my real mentor was the darkroom manager, who demanded the best in
 every print and who knew that the IIc could deliver it.
 
 Gary Todoroff
  >>