marke
Well-known
I usually get 38 frames on each roll. Sometimes 39.
Al Kaplan
Veteran
I like to cut my film into strips of 6 to sleeve it. When I have more than 36 images on a roll I try to dicard the extra ones, but they might be from someplace in the middle of the roll.
arseniii
Well-known
Watch this http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kso9oiXsqyc
Pay attention to the film tightening part!
Pay attention to the film tightening part!
Vincent.G
Well-known
I usually get 38 frames on each roll. Sometimes 39.
Teach me how to achieve that, please.
Vincent.G
Well-known
Watch this http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kso9oiXsqyc
Pay attention to the film tightening part!
Hi arsenii
Thanks for the video. I observed that he used the rewind knob to tension the film (he turned quite a bit) but would winding it bring back the fogged film into the canister? I noticed that he didn't shoot any frames off after tensioning the film, he merely just worked the rewind lever once and say it is ready to go.
btgc
Veteran
I have tried to load in darkness to use very beginning of roll, in small bodied cameras (read: short trailer) it gives near to 40 frames, 39 maybe?
Useful thing, as mentioned, is to tension film in canister after loading, and watch rewind know rotating while advancing.
Useful thing, as mentioned, is to tension film in canister after loading, and watch rewind know rotating while advancing.
David Hughes
David Hughes
Then the problem is that you get 38 or 39 slides back and the tray only holds 36... </;-)
Have fun.
Regards, David
Have fun.
Regards, David
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