Thanks, Jen - so far I've only only loaded up on roll of bulk film
(Kentemre 400) plus two test rolls of some expired TMAX 100 that was
being sold on ebay. INthe case of the Tmax, I loaded the bulk roll,
spooled out the test rolls, and then unloaded the bulk roll. The film
tested out fine
I want to minimize the wasted film in the header and (int he case of
bulk loading) the tail - since that is a constant the more film in the
canister means a greater ratio fo used film to wasted film... BUT - I
have had a couple of longer rolls and spooling them onto standard
plastice spools
I've only only loaded up on roll of bulk film
(Kentemre 400) plus two test rolls of some expired TMAX 100 that was
being sold on ebay. INthe case of the Tmax, I loaded the bulk roll,
spooled out the test rolls, and then unloaded the bulk roll. The film
tested out fine. I've decided to just buy
Than ks - I've done this a couple of times but loaded up the first roll
in a couple of sessions, mostly to see how many canisters a 100 foot
roll will fill. Since then I've loaded the bulk roll, filled up a few
canisters, and then unloaded the bulk roll without problem. DOne that
mostly to
I used to use bulk film exclusively. At that time, I was shooting a few dozen
rolls of film a month.
The cost savings vs inconvenience of using it is no longer a good trade off for
my needs, it's better to buy 20 rolls of factory loaded film and store it in
the freezer or refrigerator. That's
, so bring through 20 rolls or so from a bulk roll
takes a while - I'd rather have 4 rolls each from 5 different brands and
speeds.
Mark
On 10/6/2013 11:13 AM, Godfrey DiGiorgi wrote:
I used to use bulk film exclusively. At that time, I was shooting a few dozen
rolls of film a month.
The cost
Ah. Very different habits. I tend to standardize on one or two emulsions, and I
shoot a very limited amount of film. Although ... I find myself wanting more
and more Polaroid film... !
Godfrey
On Oct 6, 2013, at 9:37 AM, Mark C pdml-m...@charter.net wrote:
So far this year I've shot about
Hi Mark
I have been using bulk film for more than 30 years. I've never had any problems
just filling the canisters I need, when I need them. It is however adviceable
to keep the bukl roll rather cool, in order to keep the film fresh for a longer
period of time. Don't pull it in and out
these days and finally broke
down and bought a daylight loader for bulk rolls and some
reloadable canisters. I'm sure someone here has done or does do the
bulk film loading thing... Question that I'm wondering about - is
there any problem with just putting the 100 foot roll into the
loader
Thanks for everyone who offered input on bulk film loading. My loader,
25 empty cannisters and a roll of Kentmere 400 arrived last week. I was
out of town for work Sun - Thursday but tried my hand at loading
yesterday. The only mistake I made is that I did not clean the felt
light trap
don't need to pop the ends off the
cartridge.
Just tape the end of your bulk film to the leader use it to pull the
film into the cartridge. Once you've got a couple of turns on friction
will help to keep it from slipping off if the tape doesn't hold.
But, if you rewind it lose that leader inside
shooting a bit of 35mm BW these days and finally broke down and
bought a daylight loader for bulk rolls and some reloadable canisters. I'm
sure someone here has done or does do the bulk film loading thing...
Question that I'm wondering about - is there any problem with just putting
the 100 foot
to pop the ends off the
cartridge.
Just tape the end of your bulk film to the leader use it to pull the
film into the cartridge. Once you've got a couple of turns on friction
will help to keep it from slipping off if the tape doesn't hold.
But, if you rewind it lose that leader inside
reloadable canisters.
I'm
sure someone here has done or does do the bulk film loading thing...
Question that I'm wondering about - is there any problem with just
putting
the 100 foot roll into the loader and then filling canisters as needed,
or
is there a reason why you should load up the whole bulk
and homebrewed (pa)Rodinal.
Bong
On Sat, Jul 20, 2013 at 7:32 AM, Mark C pdml-m...@charter.net wrote:
I've been shooting a bit of 35mm BW these days and finally broke
down and
bought a daylight loader for bulk rolls and some reloadable
canisters. I'm
sure someone here has done or does do the bulk
. If you're careful *NOT* to rewind that
leader into the cartridge, you don't need to pop the ends off the
cartridge.
Just tape the end of your bulk film to the leader use it to pull the
film into the cartridge. Once you've got a couple of turns on friction
will help to keep it from slipping off
broke
down and
bought a daylight loader for bulk rolls and some reloadable
canisters. I'm
sure someone here has done or does do the bulk film loading thing...
Question that I'm wondering about - is there any problem with just
putting
the 100 foot roll into the loader and then filling canisters
On Sat, Jul 20, 2013 at 7:32 AM, Mark C pdml-m...@charter.net wrote:
I've been shooting a bit of 35mm BW these days and finally broke
down and
bought a daylight loader for bulk rolls and some reloadable
canisters. I'm
sure someone here has done or does do the bulk film loading thing...
Question
that
leader into the cartridge, you don't need to pop the ends off the
cartridge.
Just tape the end of your bulk film to the leader use it to pull the
film into the cartridge. Once you've got a couple of turns on friction
will help to keep it from slipping off if the tape doesn't hold.
But, if you
sticking out of the cartridge. If you're careful *NOT* to rewind
that
leader into the cartridge, you don't need to pop the ends off the
cartridge.
Just tape the end of your bulk film to the leader use it to pull
the
film into the cartridge. Once you've got a couple of turns on
friction
will help
Regarding the Kodak deal in China: In 1998 Kodak realized that the
emergence of a more prosperous middle class in China would create huge
demand for photographic products. Obviously, people would want to buy
film, and lots of it. So they got into China big time, with considerable
cost added
into the cartridge, you don't need to pop the ends off the
cartridge.
Just tape the end of your bulk film to the leader use it to pull the
film into the cartridge. Once you've got a couple of turns on friction
will help to keep it from slipping off if the tape doesn't hold.
But, if you rewind
bulk film to the leader use it to pull the
film into the cartridge. Once you've got a couple of turns on friction
will help to keep it from slipping off if the tape doesn't hold.
But, if you rewind it lose that leader inside the cartridge, it's not
long enough to retrieve with a leader extractor
of
masking tape a put it on the cassette.
Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller
- Original Message - From: Mark C pdml-m...@charter.net
Subject: Re: Bulk Film Loading
On 7/19/2013 11:37 PM, John wrote:
Half my refrigerator is taken up right now with bulk loaded
http://www.porters.com/kodak-plus-x-iso-125-35mm-bulk-b-w-film-px402-100-ft.html
On 7/20/2013 5:46 PM, Mark C wrote:
On 7/20/2013 5:25 PM, Jeffery Smith wrote:
Porters Camera or Freestyle used to sell permanent little adhesive
labels for 35mm cassettes. I never needed them since I only loaded
Sold out…a relic.
On Jul 21, 2013, at 12:46 PM, John Sessoms jsessoms...@nc.rr.com wrote:
http://www.porters.com/kodak-plus-x-iso-125-35mm-bulk-b-w-film-px402-100-ft.html
On 7/20/2013 5:46 PM, Mark C wrote:
On 7/20/2013 5:25 PM, Jeffery Smith wrote:
Porters Camera or Freestyle used to
processed film at the mini-lab left a VERY short leader
sticking out of the cartridge. If you're careful *NOT* to rewind that
leader into the cartridge, you don't need to pop the ends off the cartridge.
Just tape the end of your bulk film to the leader use it to pull the
film into the cartridge
I never had any trouble from using one like this.
http://tinyurl.com/film-opener
And in a long ago land before certain design refinements became
widespread, the other end was just as useful.
On 7/20/2013 6:12 PM, Jeffery Smith wrote:
If you use a certain film cassette opener, it won't
That SUX!
Seems like everything that makes my life worth living is now either
illegal, immoral or fattening ... or has been discontinued by the
manufacturer.
On 7/21/2013 2:15 PM, Jeffery Smith wrote:
Sold out…a relic.
On Jul 21, 2013, at 12:46 PM, John Sessoms jsessoms...@nc.rr.com
Worse yet, Porter's Camera is also gone.
http://www.porters.com
No Porter's, no Spiratone. Where are we supposed to get camera odds and ends
now?
I still have my black and brown leather Porter's bean bag, and still use it. I
think it cost about $7 in the 70's.
Jeffery
On Jul 21, 2013, at
You can find a lot of it on Amazon and ebay but it is sad. Porters did
try to continue with a combination of the old and new business model.
To bad they didn't succeed.
On 7/21/2013 2:48 PM, Jeffery Smith wrote:
Worse yet, Porter's Camera is also gone.
http://www.porters.com
No Porter's,
That should be Too bad...
(I can be my own Spelling and Grammar Nazi).
On 7/21/2013 3:42 PM, P.J. Alling wrote:
You can find a lot of it on Amazon and ebay but it is sad. Porters
did try to continue with a combination of the old and new business
model. To bad they didn't succeed.
On
Film canister technology seemed to change at some time: when I first started
using bulk film (about
1971) even Kodak cartridges could be easily split apart and re-used. Then some
time later, it
became impossible to get the end off without damaging it, so I kept using some
rather battered
and some reloadable canisters. I'm
sure someone here has done or does do the bulk film loading thing...
Question that I'm wondering about - is there any problem with just putting
the 100 foot roll into the loader and then filling canisters as needed, or
is there a reason why you should load up
I waited too long…
Availability: Sold Out
Item #: 400061
On Jul 21, 2013, at 10:46 , John Sessoms wrote:
http://www.porters.com/kodak-plus-x-iso-125-35mm-bulk-b-w-film-px402-100-ft.html
On 7/20/2013 5:46 PM, Mark C wrote:
On 7/20/2013 5:25 PM, Jeffery Smith wrote:
Porters Camera or
I think Plus X was discontinued some time ago - I got a few rolls o 120
and 10 pack of 24 exposure 35mm when it was disconitnued, which I still
have. Istumbled into a pro pack of 120 on ebay at a good price recently.
I really liked that film. These days I am using Arista Edu 100. I bought
a bit of 35mm BW these days and finally broke
down and
bought a daylight loader for bulk rolls and some reloadable
canisters. I'm
sure someone here has done or does do the bulk film loading thing...
Question that I'm wondering about - is there any problem with just
putting
the 100 foot roll
According to this Wikipedia article, Plus-X was discontinued in 2011.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_discontinued_photographic_films#Plus_X_125
On 7/21/2013 10:23 PM, pdml-m...@charter.net wrote:
I think Plus X was discontinued some time ago - I got a few rolls o
120 and 10 pack of 24
Where are we supposed to get camera odds and ends now?
Craigs list, Ebay, Amazon, PDML etc.
Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller
- Original Message -
From: Jeffery Smith jsmith...@gmail.com
Subject: Re: Bulk Film Loading
Worse yet, Porter's Camera is also
There are still 1 hour places prevalent here and one lab that does 120
C41 and E6, but only once a week. The other lab that did it in house
abruptly stopped when their machine broke and could not be repaired, and
I expect that might be ultimate end of local 120 developing at this lab
as well.
On 7/19/2013 11:37 PM, John wrote:
Half my refrigerator is taken up right now with bulk loaded
cartridges, a bulk loader bulk rolls of film. And I didn't pay a
penny for any of it. Someone who made the decision to go completely
digital never shoot film again gave it to me.
HOw do you
If you have a lab in your area, see if they will give you some of the
plastic film canisters (with lids) that they normally toss. There are
probably a lot fewer of them these days, but a lab will still be the
accumulator.
Hopefully they haven't gotten precious enough to CHARGE for. But then
you
On 7/20/2013 9:46 AM, Mark C wrote:
There are still 1 hour places prevalent here and one lab that does 120
C41 and E6, but only once a week. The other lab that did it in house
abruptly stopped when their machine broke and could not be repaired, and
I expect that might be ultimate end of local
On 7/20/2013 9:51 AM, Mark C wrote:
On 7/19/2013 11:37 PM, John wrote:
Half my refrigerator is taken up right now with bulk loaded
cartridges, a bulk loader bulk rolls of film. And I didn't pay a
penny for any of it. Someone who made the decision to go completely
digital never shoot film
Darren -
Your post on film canisters reminded me of this tongue-in-cheek blog
post I wrote several years back. It followed a discussion of how to
carry your SD cards.
http://georgesweblog.blogspot.com/2006/08/nostalgic-sd-card-cases.html
gs
George Sinos
I have some of those carrying cases filled with old 2GB SD cards.
On 7/20/2013 11:19 AM, George Sinos wrote:
Darren -
Your post on film canisters reminded me of this tongue-in-cheek blog
post I wrote several years back. It followed a discussion of how to
carry your SD cards.
: Re: Bulk Film Loading
On 7/19/2013 11:37 PM, John wrote:
Half my refrigerator is taken up right now with bulk loaded cartridges, a
bulk loader bulk rolls of film. And I didn't pay a penny for any of it.
Someone who made the decision to go completely digital never shoot film
again gave
I used to use small self adhesive labels. They stuck well enough, I
never had one come off unintentionally, I could mark such thins as last
frame used etc., if I switched firm in the middle of a roll, and were
easy enough to remove when I recycled the film cassette. That way if I
used
number of exposures on a piece of
masking tape a put it on the cassette.
Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller
- Original Message - From: Mark C pdml-m...@charter.net
Subject: Re: Bulk Film Loading
On 7/19/2013 11:37 PM, John wrote:
Half my refrigerator
a put it on the cassette.
Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller
- Original Message - From: Mark C pdml-m...@charter.net
Subject: Re: Bulk Film Loading
On 7/19/2013 11:37 PM, John wrote:
Half my refrigerator is taken up right now with bulk loaded
On 7/20/2013 5:25 PM, Jeffery Smith wrote:
Porters Camera or Freestyle used to sell permanent little adhesive labels for 35mm
cassettes. I never needed them since I only loaded one type of BW film (Plus
X).
Jeffery
I wish Plus-X was still around
Mark
--
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
On 7/20/2013 11:18 AM, John Sessoms wrote:
I seem to have inherited the pack-rat gene as a dominant from both
parents ...
Then you are probably the right person to ask this question - can you
re-use commercial film canisters? I am somewhat embarrassed to admit
this in a public forum but I
If you use a certain film cassette opener, it won't crimp the end cap. I'm not
sure how many times you can reuse it, though. Look here:
http://www.adorama.com/KRCO.html
Jeffery
On Jul 20, 2013, at 4:57 PM, Mark C pdml-m...@charter.net wrote:
On 7/20/2013 11:18 AM, John Sessoms wrote:
I
When I was spooling my own 35mm the crimped ends of the Kodak canisters
were very difficult to remove, though earlier Kodak canisters were made
differently and easily reusable, I had a couple. Ilford canisters were
very easy to re use and seemed to be made for that from the start.
On
I've been shooting a bit of 35mm BW these days and finally broke down
and bought a daylight loader for bulk rolls and some reloadable
canisters. I'm sure someone here has done or does do the bulk film
loading thing... Question that I'm wondering about - is there any
problem with just putting
loader for bulk rolls and some reloadable canisters. I'm
sure someone here has done or does do the bulk film loading thing...
Question that I'm wondering about - is there any problem with just putting
the 100 foot roll into the loader and then filling canisters as needed, or
is there a reason why
broke down and
bought a daylight loader for bulk rolls and some reloadable canisters. I'm
sure someone here has done or does do the bulk film loading thing...
Question that I'm wondering about - is there any problem with just putting
the 100 foot roll into the loader and then filling canisters
canisters. I'm
sure someone here has done or does do the bulk film loading thing...
Question that I'm wondering about - is there any problem with just putting
the 100 foot roll into the loader and then filling canisters as needed, or
is there a reason why you should load up the whole bulk roll
, Mark C pdml-m...@charter.net wrote:
I've been shooting a bit of 35mm BW these days and finally broke down and
bought a daylight loader for bulk rolls and some reloadable canisters. I'm
sure someone here has done or does do the bulk film loading thing... Question
that I'm wondering about
] On Behalf Of Mark C
Sent: Saturday, 20 July 2013 9:33 AM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: Bulk Film Loading
I've been shooting a bit of 35mm BW these days and finally broke down and
bought a daylight loader
for bulk rolls and some reloadable canisters. I'm sure someone here has done or
does
You have to load the 100' roll in the dark, but there is a baffle that blocks
the light when you are loading canisters.
Jeffery
On Jul 19, 2013, at 6:44 PM, Zos Xavius zosxav...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm curious. You can load the rolls in daylight without a changing
bag? How much money do you
Sent: Saturday, 20 July 2013 9:33 AM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: Bulk Film Loading
I've been shooting a bit of 35mm BW these days and finally broke down and
bought a daylight loader
for bulk rolls and some reloadable canisters. I'm sure someone here has done
or does do the bulk
[mailto:pdml-boun...@pdml.net] On Behalf Of Mark C
Sent: Saturday, 20 July 2013 9:33 AM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: Bulk Film Loading
I've been shooting a bit of 35mm BW these days and finally broke down and
bought a daylight loader
for bulk rolls and some reloadable canisters. I'm sure someone
forget to let it warm up and lose any condensation before transferring to the
canister.
HTH
John Coyle
Brisbane, Australia
-Original Message-
From: PDML [mailto:pdml-boun...@pdml.net] On Behalf Of Mark C
Sent: Saturday, 20 July 2013 9:33 AM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: Bulk Film
wrote:
I've been shooting a bit of 35mm BW these days and finally broke down and
bought a daylight loader for bulk rolls and some reloadable canisters. I'm
sure someone here has done or does do the bulk film loading thing...
Question that I'm wondering about - is there any problem with just
a bit of 35mm BW these days and finally broke down and
bought a daylight loader for bulk rolls and some reloadable canisters. I'm sure
someone here has done or does do the bulk film loading thing... Question that I'm
wondering about - is there any problem with just putting the 100 foot roll
canisters. I'm
sure someone here has done or does do the bulk film loading thing...
Question that I'm wondering about - is there any problem with just putting
the 100 foot roll into the loader and then filling canisters as needed, or
is there a reason why you should load up the whole bulk roll in one
Back in the day... I loaded a half-dozen rolls at a time, and had no problems.
Rick
http://photo.net/photos/RickW
- Original Message -
From: Mark C pdml-m...@charter.net
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List pdml@pdml.net
Cc:
Sent: Friday, July 19, 2013 7:32 PM
Subject: Bulk Film Loading
the
leader you leave out to attach to the take up in the camera.
You get a little bit of waste film on each end of the cartridge, but how
much you save depends on how much you're paying for the bulk film how
hard it is to find that film in factory loaded cartridges.
Half my refrigerator is taken up
handling!
Alan C
-Original Message-
From: Mark C
Sent: Saturday, July 20, 2013 3:33 AM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: Re: Bulk Film Loading
Thanks for that advice - I was starting to get tempted to see if I could
load up a canister with more than 36 exposures. But then - who needs
The research facility where my SO works was throwing out a bunch of junk
from which I rescued two Alden 74 bulk film loaders for daylight loading
of cassettes. They will handle 27.5, 50 and 100 foot bulk rolls and
appear to be in good working condition. In fact, one still has film
I haven't had any problems with bulkloading 35mm and static
electricity at all. Perhaps you have been loading the film in some
very static-prone environment (new houses with all strange new
materials come to mind)?. Or you had just bad luck.
About the only problem with bulkloading was getting
Same experience here, the last frame is almost always compromised.
Add to this you need to be very careful with dust and emulsion bits
that may get into the light brush and scratch the film. Also had
once problems with faulty DX contacts on reusable cartridges that
ruined several
But the main reason I gave up to bulk roll film is price. Have a
AF look at BH: the price difference per 135 film roll between prepack
AF roll and bulk roll is so thin it's not worth the hassle.
That's surprising. At least here in Czechia bulk film was a lot
cheaper than prepack (at least
Robert, the fellow who owns the lab I go to, has been suggesting that
I get a bulk film loader for some time; he uses Agfa paper, and when
he orders paper, he'll usually order bulk film as well, for his own
purposes (not for resale). But, he's said that anytime that I want,
he can order some
Ah, the joys of bulk loading, the fogging the static, the screams of
pain, memories...
frank theriault wrote:
Robert, the fellow who owns the lab I go to, has been suggesting that
I get a bulk film loader for some time; he uses Agfa paper, and when
he orders paper, he'll usually order bulk film
On Tue, 19 Oct 2004 21:05:01 -0400, Peter J. Alling
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Ah, the joys of bulk loading, the fogging the static, the screams of
pain, memories...
I can always count on you, Peter, for an encouraging word.
Thanks for not letting me down. g
-frank
--
Sharpness is a
I lost a comma in there, oh well. Seriously I used to bulk load TXP,
HP5 and Pan-X. I stopped after I realized that no matter what I did I
always managed to have enough static electricity build up on the film to
cause low density parts of the image look like I'd been taking pictures
in a
- Original Message -
From: Peter J. Alling
Subject: Re: New Toy: Bulk Film Loader
I lost a comma in there, oh well. Seriously I used to bulk load
TXP, HP5 and Pan-X. I stopped after I realized that no matter what
I did I always managed to have enough static electricity build up
I also saw a LX bulk film magazine from China!
That's got to be a scam!
jb`:^)
Been thinking about getting a bulk film loader. Is anyone
still using these things. Which brands are considered
better? I'd want a very good quality loader and don't mind
paying a little extra for it.
-Original Message-
From: Shel Belinkoff [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, February 25, 2004 11:06 AM
To: PDML
Subject: Bulk Film Loader Ques
Been thinking about getting a bulk film loader. Is anyone
still using these things. Which brands are considered
better? I'd want a very
thinking about getting a bulk film loader. Is anyone
SB still using these things. Which brands are considered
SB better? I'd want a very good quality loader and don't mind
SB paying a little extra for it.
Shel, what you want is a loader where the film does not touch
anything, like felt. The Watson is one of them. $26 US new. eBay
must have lots of them. You loose about 1 and a half end shots,
which is annoying when you just have caught that flying saucer. It's
worth it to do the initial
Date: Wed, 25 Feb 2004 08:05:58 -0800
From: Shel Belinkoff [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Been thinking about getting a bulk film loader. Is anyone
still using these things. Which brands are considered
better? I'd want a very good quality loader and don't mind
paying a little extra for it.
Yup
More ...
They're going really cheap right now used.
Mine were in good shape for about $5 each, as always garage-sale specials.
Midwest Photo has a bunch of them piled up.
I think they ask around $10 each.
http://www.mpex.com
Collin
http://www.bhphotovideo.com/bnh/controller/home?ci=1sb=pspn=1sq=descInitialSearch=yesO=SearchBarA=searchQ=*shs=watson+loaderimage.x=0image.y=0
This is the one. The Volkswagon. $18 new at BH.
Andre
http://www.bhphotovideo.com/bnh/controller/home?O=productlistA=detailsQ=sku=31737is=REG
To avoid. Has felt and more expensive. $30.
Users will probably tell you they are OK and they might be right, but
why have felt running over the film when you can do without.
Remembering from the old days. Avoid the Lloyd as Andre says. The Watson is the
old standby but only gives approximate frame counting (friction drive counter).
The Alden is the deluxe unit that will give very accurate frame counting
(counter like in a camera). However, I have no idea how these
- Original Message -
From: Shel Belinkoff
Subject: Bulk Film Loader Ques
Been thinking about getting a bulk film loader. Is anyone
still using these things. Which brands are considered
better? I'd want a very good quality loader and don't mind
paying a little extra
On June 4, 2003 02:50 pm, Brendan wrote:
Val, humm I want a loader cause I have 2 reels of
100/1000 kodak slide film, 36 ft each, and I want to
shoot the stuff, and bulk buy provia to.
Photo-co in Quebec sells one model for a good price.
http://www.photo-co.com/securestore/
What is to stop him from using 'good film' bought in bulk?
Ed
Don't. Use expensive, good film. You'll be more critical to what you see in
the viewfinder, and will do more planning, and eventually you'll get better
pics.
Brendan wrote:
Ok who had some of these for sale cheap?
Nothing. He can do whatever he wants. He lives in a free country.
Ed Matthew wrote:
What is to stop him from using 'good film' bought in bulk?
lets say I stumbled across someones freezer with LOTS
of film in it, they wanted to make some spac so I got
2 reels for $5
--- Nick Zentena [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On June 4, 2003 02:50 pm, Brendan wrote:
Val, humm I want a loader cause I have 2 reels of
100/1000 kodak slide film, 36 ft
Hi,
I have this loader (and the instruction somewhere) but it isn't too hard
to use. One of the yellow knobs opens the chamber where you put the
fresh bulk roll. You will need to do this somewhere absolutely dark or
in a changing bag. Thread a little bit of film from the bulk film
chamber
Try the Bulk Loading FAQ at:
http://www.ccs.neu.edu/home/genie/bulk.html
I used it when my loader came without instructions...
hth
Mike Y
- Original Message -
From: James Adams [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, June 25, 2002 3:24 AM
Subject: Re: Bulk Film
James Adams wrote:
I have just been offered a 100' can of Fuji Superia Pro 100 for $10 CDN,
only it's AOD Aug 2000 (Refrigerated). I don't have a bulk loader, but it
seems a good deal.
...
Bulk loaders cost just a few dollars (even canadian ones...) but at that
price I'd expect the film to
Have any of you used the LX Bulk Film Magazine? I have not ever seen one
for sale and I was wondering about opinions and if there are any still
around. Thank you for your time.
Bryan
-
This message is from the Pentax-Discuss Mail List. To unsubscribe,
go to http://www.pdml.net and follow
.
...
Cheapes solution is simply to ransack minilabs for used cartridges. They
just pull the film out and cut it a cm. or two before the cartridge.
Tape the bulk film to the remaining piece of the original one. Do not
use the cartridge more than one or two times. If you're lucky you can
get them
Hi Albano,
I have a definite answer for you ;-)
Although you can buy plastic or metal openable film crtridge, it's
expensive and not ideal. What's best is to get to a nearby lab, and
politely request a search trough their cartridge trash bin. Find
enough cartridges of the ISO you
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