[LargeFormat] 5x7 Daylight tank
LNPhoto
LNPhoto at twmi.rr.com
Wed Apr 6 14:14:20 EDT 2005
On Apr 5, 2005, at 11:00 PM, Richard Knoppow wrote:
>
> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Edward Meyers" <aghalide at panix.com>
> To: "f32 Large Format Photography Mail List" <largeformat at f32.net>
> Sent: Tuesday, April 05, 2005 12:07 PM
> Subject: RE: [LargeFormat] 5x7 Daylight tank
>
>
>> You forget about interlaving sheets in a tray in total darkness or
>> visually with an infrared viewing device. Ed
>>
>> On Tue, 5 Apr 2005, Frank Filippone wrote:
>>
>>> There was made a 5x7 version of the plastic 4x5 tank with the insert
>>> for
>>> holding the film. I think it was made by Morse or FR or HP/Combi,
>>> but I
>>> forget.... I have never seen one for sale on Ebay. So maybe it was
>>> rarely
>>> produced.
>>>
> Morse Instrument made a daylight tank that took standard 5x7 or 4x7
> holders. The tank consisted of a special housing for the holders with
> a light tight labrynth at the bottom. The entire assembly was immerced
> into standard type tanks and agitated in the usual way for film
> hangers by removing and re-immercing it at intervals. These were made
> for the military as well as commercially and at one time were fairly
> common used. I missed the last one I saw and have not seen any
> recently. Serching eBay for Morse may find one. Morse also made
> developing tanks for long rolls of film. There was a size for 70mm and
> another for either 35mm or 16mm with a capacity of 50 feet. The 16mm
> version was used extensivly by the Air Force for developing gun camera
> films.
>
>
I have one of these, and while its sized for 5x7, you'll need the 3.5
gallon 8x10 tanks to use it. For me, the Morse tank seems to have a lot
of hoops to jump through just to get daylight developing. I'd rather
use the stainless steel racks to hold the neg hangers and stay dark.
They hold a lot more and are easier to clean.
Les
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