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Enlarger for 5x7


matthew_sleeth

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Hi. I live an area that does not have 5x7 enlargers that I can look at. Does anyone have any advice about what 5x7 enlargers give the most bang for the buck, and about sources for finding them? Any help will be appreciated.Advice on used enlargers would be great too, as I picked my parents wrong to be able to afford the very best.Good enough will do. Matthew Sleeth
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5x7 enlargers come in three varieties: Elwood, Omega E, and everythng

else. Elwoods are huge old diffusion enlargers, built like tanks,

and I think all pre-WW2 vintage. The Imega E is a more modern

design, basically a scaled-up Omega D with condensor or cold-light

head. Parts and carriers, etc are more or less readily available.

Everything else -- you're on your own. Lots of Omega Es on eBay, but

you'd better live close to the seller so you can pick it up and not

have it shipped. Good luck.

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The Durst 138 series offers stability (and weight) and all sorts of

functions like adjustments in the table, head alignment, ease of

use. You can even turn the head for horizontal projection. With

the glass neg. holder you can enlarge anything from 35mm to

5X7 given the appropriate lens. Highly recommended. Different

head types are available, i.e. condensor or diffuse.

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I use a Durst 138 with a Chromega E 5X7 head fitted. It is the best.

They generally go for a premium price but I found one quite reasonable

a few years ago from a graphic arts company going digital. It is big,

stable, precise, and comes apart in 5 minutes to fit in a compact

sedan. After several moves (and how many years?), I put it togther,

zero the adjustments, and it's always perfectly aligned. It may take

some time to find one though: be patient.

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I saw a used Beseler 57 at a store. It looked like an upsized version

of the venerable 45M. I'd never seen one before, so I suspect they

are rare. But, for moderate enlargements, without getting something

built like and the size of a tank, it looked like it might be a

serviceable choice.

 

<p>

 

Or, get an old 5x7 view camera & roll your own. Aristo likely makes a

stock light source that would cover this format for reasonable money.

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Hi,

I have a Durst S-45 EM. Got it real cheap in great cond. Supposed

to do up to 4x5 but works fine with 5x7 too. Just make sure you get

the entire set of condensors for all the formats you want to

use...coated if possible.This is a big enlarger with a table that is

hight ajustable and 20x24's are a snap...no projecting on the floor

or wall is needed.Only downside is tough to put a color head on it

without major conversion and wish it had extention focusing knobs for

big printing ....ease in focus. I think this is the best of the

5x7's.I havent seen the Zone V1 though.

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The Kodak Autofocus E is (was) a great enlarger. A Cadillac. Akin to

the Elwoods in being real big and tank-like. The vintage is

about the same. Automatic refocus, as the name suggests -- you just

set the focus once and it stays in focus as you adjust for different

size prints. I just check it once in a while. The enlarger came with

the excellent Ektanon 7.5" enlarging lens (you must use that lens).

It's a "hot" head, diffusion-plate type enlarger. Aristo will

special-order you a cold head and deliver w/in a couple weeks of your

order. I'm thinking that cold head cost me about $250. I got the

enlarger and the lens on ebay for $275, I believe. -jeff buckels

(albuquerque nm)

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Matthew,

 

<p>

 

I print custom color work for photographers who use the 6x17 format and

need prints up to 18"x54".

 

<p>

 

I too have a Durst 138 fitted with an Omega 5x7 head. It's a gem! If

you want to test the waters before buying a dichro head, get the Durst

and add color filters into the filter drawer using the condensors.

Grain will be quite evident, but it's a starting point. I paid $700 for

the Durst with condensors, and $600 for the Omega on e-bay.

 

<p>

 

good luck,

 

<p>

 

Andy

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  • 1 year later...
Beseler made a motorized head enlarger specifically for 5 x 7 work - it's a version of the 45 that has a model number 57MB. (I've got one in my basement right now). It's been years since I used it but it worked real well for enlarging sheet film from our old Speed Graphic.
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