This project offers cheap alternative to usually expensove vintage (or new) darkroom timers. Uses just a handful of components
Arduino based timer for enlarger used in analog photography
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This project offers cheap alternative to usually expensove vintage (or new) darkroom timers. Uses just a handful of components
DarkroomRelay_v.0.2.inox-arduino - 1.57 kB - 06/10/2020 at 18:20 |
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Finally bought all of the components and put this together. Also code is updated and so is the github page. More pictures in instructions section.
Added cleaner code with captions.
Now has functions of single button time changing in seconds, displayed on 6 LED in binary (didn't have 2 7-seg displays, but looks cooler none the less). One button executes, and one is for reset. Red LED in picture acts as relay until it ships.
Buy all the components from the list and arrange them in aesthetically pleasing manner
Be smarter than me, use something better than drill, sandpaper and file. Fit you switches and LEDs
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Wow I bet that looked awesome! That sounds pretty high tech compared to this. Yellow LEDs are not that safe, but they are quite weak here and not in direct contact. To be honest I use red LED bike light as my safe light and it works good. Only when I'm impatient and shine it directly to paper form up close does clouding occurs.
I suppose the spectrum of LEDs is narrower and may not have significant energy in the wavelengths the paper is sensitve to.
Yeah, I used an old amplifier case for the timer, and the knob was for time instead of volume. The relay was an old telephone exchange relay. The vacuum tube was an octal base tube salvaged from an old radio. I was so happy to be able to recycle those old components. Of course in those days I never thought of taking a picture (film cost money) for posting to Hackaday in the future, hahaha.
Happy hacking!
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Cool, brings back memories of working with photographic chemicals as a kid. I built a vacuum tube timer wuth a variable R, C, and a neon bulb as the trigger element in those days. Also a CdS cell exposure meter for estimating paper exposure.
One thing, are yellow LEDs safe for photographic paper? I remember darkroom lights had to be red.