1 / 15

Darkroom Fog and Viewbox Illumination Check

Darkroom Fog and Viewbox Illumination Check. Darkroom Fog Check. EQUIPMENT NEEDED X-ray film Clock or stopwatch Densitometer Penetrometer Darkroom Radiographic room. Turn off all of the safelights and overhead lights in the darkroom.

abe
Download Presentation

Darkroom Fog and Viewbox Illumination Check

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Darkroom Fog and Viewbox Illumination Check

  2. Darkroom Fog Check EQUIPMENT NEEDED • X-ray film • Clock or stopwatch • Densitometer • Penetrometer • Darkroom • Radiographic room

  3. Turn off all of the safelights and overhead lights in the darkroom. After eyes are adjusted to the darkness (about 5 minutes), look for any sources of light that you can find. Pay particular attention to the seals around processors, pass-boxes, darkroom doors, and so on. Suspended ceilings can leak light from the surrounding rooms. Make note of any light leaks and indicate them in the analysis portion of this experiment. Turn the safelights back on.

  4. Remove an 8  10 inch cassette from the passbox, and take it into one of the radiographic rooms. Place it in the center of the x-ray table at a 40-inch (100-cm) source-to-image distance (SID). Place a penetrometer in the center of the cassette, aligning the long dimension of the wedge with the long axis of the cassette. Collimate the light field to the edges of the step wedge. Expose the cassette using approximately 70 kilovolts (peak) (kVp) and 5 milliamperes-second (mAs) or enough to give the center step of the step wedge pattern an optical density of approximately 1.0.

  5. Enough to give the center step of the step wedge pattern an optical density of approximately 1.0 Approx. 1.0

  6. Return the cassette to the darkroom and remove the exposed film from the cassette. Lay it on the counter and cover one half of the film with a sheet of cardboard or other opaque material.

  7. Expose the film to normal safelight conditions for 2 minutes and then process the film.

  8. Place the film on a viewbox illuminator and observe if there is a defined line or break between the halves. Use a densitometer to record the optical density of each half. Determine the maximum density difference by subtracting the two optical density values for each step. The step with the greatest maximum density difference indicates the darkroom fog level. Record all data on the Safelight Test form.

  9. Viewbox Illuminations EQUIPMENT NEEDED • Photometer • Various department viewboxes

  10. Photometer

  11. Set the photometer to measure illumination in candles (cd) per square millimeter (nit). Place the aperature opening 9 inches away from the center of the viewbox illuminator and record the reading on the data page. 9”

  12. Mentally divide the view box into quadrants and take a light measurement from the center of each quadrant. Record the readings on the View Box Quality Control Test Form. Compare each of these values with each other and with that of the center obtained - These values should be within ±10% of each other. ? ? ? ? ? Illuminationmax– Illuminationmin Illuminationmax+ Illuminationmin 100%

  13. Repeat Steps 1 and 2 for the other viewboxes within your particular bank. Using the center readings, determine the maximum variation in brightness among the viewboxes in a particular bank. These values should be within  15% of each other.

  14. Set the photometer to record illumination in lux or foot-candles (ft-c). Measure the ambient light levels by turning off the viewbox, but leave on all of the overhead room lights that are normally in use. Place the light meter 9 inches away from the viewbox front and record the reading (even though the viewbox is off). The maximum ambient light should be about 320 lux or 30 ft-c.

More Related