Dr. RawheaD
Chomp
[STEP 1]
Take an empty 120 spool (I'm sure you have a few lying around; you know, from the B&W film you developed on your own, or when you respooled a 120 onto a 620 spool?), and mod as seen here.
First, saw off the part in red. Then, carefully carve out the parts in blue so that you get something like what you see on the left. I did all of this with an Exacto knife set I bought at an art supply store. The saw worked for the red portion, and one of the carving knives worked well for the blue portions.
Note that the width of the two "forks" has to be much narrower than it originally is. See where I've carved it down where the two arrows are.
The length of the forks do not have to be exact. The longer one here is 9mm and the shorter one is 6mm. It don't matter too much because it's actually the wider round stubs that puts a limit on where the film canister goes. And praise almighty, the combined leghts are just perfect.
Chomp
[STEP 1]
Take an empty 120 spool (I'm sure you have a few lying around; you know, from the B&W film you developed on your own, or when you respooled a 120 onto a 620 spool?), and mod as seen here.
First, saw off the part in red. Then, carefully carve out the parts in blue so that you get something like what you see on the left. I did all of this with an Exacto knife set I bought at an art supply store. The saw worked for the red portion, and one of the carving knives worked well for the blue portions.
Note that the width of the two "forks" has to be much narrower than it originally is. See where I've carved it down where the two arrows are.
The length of the forks do not have to be exact. The longer one here is 9mm and the shorter one is 6mm. It don't matter too much because it's actually the wider round stubs that puts a limit on where the film canister goes. And praise almighty, the combined leghts are just perfect.