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Developing Reels - Solving the Thin Film Problem

Svema 200, my favorite B/W film has a very strong but thin base. It is so thin it can be a challenge to load on a developing reel. Thinking a wider flange, like the one pictured on the bottom would make life a lot easier since getting it started is the hardest part. It did seem to load easier but I was having unusual problems of large areas not developing. hummmmm. So I loaded a strip in daylight and found the film was loading in the same spiral right behind itself. No more Arista reels for Svema.

 

The top reel is my good old faithful Paterson, I have many of these. AP, Coast and many other brands make reels very close to this design, although I have used some that do not have plastic as smooth and slick as Paterson. I really stick to the Paterson brand on these. Some consider this to be a standard reel and offer the wide flange as a premium reel.

 

The middle reel is a Vivitar branded reel, I don't know who really made it but I have only seen it with the Vivitar name. It works well for any film including Svema. I would love a few more of these, they are a little easier to teach newbies how to load a reel.

 

The bottom is the Arista Premium wide flange reel, I have seen it made under Samigon, AP, and Omega names, often referred to as a premium reel. Sorry but I need a reel to work with any film I load on it so out it went.

 

The short pieces of film in reels are simply there to make the loading flanges easier to see although nano_burger's comment below about film chimping is hilarious.

 

 

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Uploaded on March 26, 2015
Taken on July 21, 2014