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Differences between IIIf base plates.


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I believe that is true, it requires a AFLOO, however others may have found alternatives.

But AFLOO is for work in the dark, isn't it? Noel is talking about two loaders for work in daylight.;)

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Hi Juan/Swamiji

 

That is a square section, I would have called a Lloyds clone, but that would not have helped you either the Tear drops are Watson 'clones'.

 

http://www.darkroompro.com/pdf/misc_equipment/watson.pdf

 

Noel

 

OMG... I just purchased a device that looks identical to the "Watson", I was looking for the instructions. The Instructions refer to the Leica N-3 type cassette, is this FILCA or IXMOO?

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I've noticed, that when I load the Leica IIIf with a roll of a standard film, I can not put the cassette to the bottom, because if I do it, the film is too down (I say low, because the camera is upside down :rolleyes:) I have to leave the cassette a little higher (about 2mm), for what the gear teeth of drag, goes into the film's holes.

Perhaps, using the FILCA does not happen.

 

Juan.

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OMG... I just purchased a device that looks identical to the "Watson", I was looking for the instructions. The Instructions refer to the Leica N-3 type cassette, is this FILCA or IXMOO?

 

B = FILCA

N = IXMOO

 

Note some Watsons (plastic) come with a plastic washer 2mm thick because without waqsher they correspond to Barnack sized camera cassette housings (for FILCA) to avoid any axial movement. Fitting the washer reduces the cassette chamber by 2mm to match M camera size (for IXMOO).

 

 

Noel

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I've noticed, that when I load the Leica IIIf with a roll of a standard film, I can not put the cassette to the bottom, because if I do it, the film is too down (I say low, because the camera is upside down :rolleyes:) I have to leave the cassette a little higher (about 2mm), for what the gear teeth of drag, goes into the film's holes.

Perhaps, using the FILCA does not happen.

 

Juan.

 

Hi Juan

 

It is necessary to push the cassette firmly into the camera cassette housing, if necessary moving (rotating) the rewind forks to allow the cassette to seat properly, the removable spool needs to be seated as well.

 

Some of HCB photos show the sprocket holes, he may not have seated the cassette or the pressure plate springs may have been weak.

 

Noel

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Noel, if I push the cassette to the bottom, the film's holes doesn't match with the teeth of the gear. I must to pull it up, only a little, and then, when I operate the drag the holes and the teeth match. Ever I'm talking about a standard cassette, because I've never tried a FILCA.:(

 

Juan.

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Hi Jaun

 

You are correct.

 

The problem is when I load the IIIc I invert it and refer to the end with the knob as the bottom.

 

You need to push the cassette into the body to engage the forks, and align the film with the pressure plate rails. When the film is held in the rails it is unlikely the cassette will move. This is true as well for the FILCA, until the knob if the FILCA is retained by the latch, when the cassette is sandwiched between latch and the chassis at the fork end, and it has not room to move in.

 

Sorry

 

Noel.

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  • 7 years later...

I have three versions of the Watson type bulk loader and only one of them - the Watson 100 with the 2mm shim removed - works properly with FILCA cassettes. Both the Watson 66 and the Alden 74 (a very nicely made Watson clone) work well with my early Nikon cassettes and with generic cassettes but the FILCA is too long and does not fit well. The 66 and the 74 do have the control to close the cassette so I'm sure they will work with the IXMOO, but I have no IXMOO cassettes to test. 

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