Hi Fernando,
that sounds quite interesting!
Indeed! I like scanning and scanners. I can't seem to have enough scanners (also have an Epson V700 and had a Umax Powerlook 3000 too, strange beast).
The Imacon is not a drum scanner BTW. It tries to be.
🙂
I'm sure you know that already, but there's a sizeable difference between a CCD scanner and a drum.
A CCD does not cope well with grain because you can't adjust the relationship between sampling frequency (which is fixed and determined by the sensor pitch) and maximum optical frequency, which is determined by the lens and its aperture.
So without this kind of control you can have aliasing issues which translate in apparent "grain amplification"; which does not cope well with nicely drawn fine details.
A properly done drum scan has no such issues.
The ScanMate can sample at 11'000 spi, with optical frequencies worth 8500-9000 spi on fluid (higher when dry mounted, but with other issues).
Yes, as mighty Erwin Puts has shown, with a state-of-the art optical enlarger and very good technique you may beat that (IF you manage to get perfect focus on the paper, IF you manage to have film perfectly flat in the carrier, etc.), but only for 135 and with less control on micro contrast etc.
With scanning you get the same resolving power up to 8"x10" if you want.
Anyway it's apples and oranges, a fully chemical print is just different, you can't just "measure" the difference with bare numbers (that would be like the endless debates film vs. digital, it's not just resolving power and megapixels and exposure latitude).
A friend of mine prints chemically with a large format enlarger from 8x10" originals and his prints are absolutely beautiful, with a balance of details, contrast and tones I really admire.
This suits very well his needs, his tastes and his kind of photography.
I know I can extract nearly everything from any original of any size, be it negative BW, negative color, positive, whatever.
And I know I can selectively enhance or suppress spatial frequencies, alter hues, local contrast, balance, in a way which would be very very difficult to do chemically (I had my years in the chemical darkroom as well).
And all in a short time.
This suits very well my needs, my tastes and my kind of photography.
To each his own.
🙂
Too much off topic
😛
Now back to hires BW film: you said Copex Rapid in 120 format is more like 50 iso, while in 135 size it's true 40 iso.
Why is that? Different effect from the developer, or is film itself slightly different?
Thanks, I really can't wait to have fun with this film!!
Too many Acros 100 and Efke 50 during last years, now it's time for something different.
😉
Fernando