Author
|
Topic: Scratches on Print
|
|
|
Peter Mork
Expert Film Handler

Posts: 181
From: Newton, MA, USA
Registered: Jun 2002
|
posted 03-16-2004 11:52 PM
The sort of question that's hard to answer at a distance. Another likely culprit for those diagonal scratches is a roller going to or from the platter. If a flange drags over the emulsion side, bingo. You can sometimes tell by noting the distance between scratches what diameter the roller was that did the deed, and that can narrow down the possibilities.
Any roller that swings freely on a bracket, notably the last one that feeds the film onto the platter, is especially suspect. I'm a strong advocate of gluing a disc of felt to the outside of any roller flange that MIGHT be a problem, and trimming it so it extends just a tiny bit over the flange edge. Yes, you're supposed check your lacing each run, but with thousands of runs accidents do happen, and the felt is your insurance that a mis-threaded roller won't damage the print.
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|