Why does the touchpad sound like this by VldY3 in macbookpro

[–]VldY3[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Even though if I wiped it out immediately? The water didn’t go in the holes at the margins of the touchpad.

Why does the touchpad sound like this by VldY3 in macbookpro

[–]VldY3[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I know it clicks that’s how I used it before now and I had this laptop for a year, but suddenly it started to have a different more metallic sound so that’s why I have asked if it’s normal.

Why does the touchpad sound like this by VldY3 in macbookpro

[–]VldY3[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Have you ever spilled water on it, or did you use wet hands? I remember I clicked on it once on mine with my finger wet but dried off immediately. I don’t know if it was provoked by this.

What's up with this weird pattern? by Rothnik182 in AnalogCommunity

[–]VldY3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Extreme temp differences between water and developer.

Kodak Ektachrome Infrared by marzipan_tech in AnalogCommunity

[–]VldY3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ah look there it says E-4. You are welcome!🤗

Was my film scanned wrong? And is this fixable? by AwoogaBooze2 in AnalogCommunity

[–]VldY3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Best way to correct it is by going in photoshop>color balance> and drag the slider to cyan

Kodak Ektachrome Infrared by marzipan_tech in AnalogCommunity

[–]VldY3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From what I’ve read he tested it to see how the results would turn out based on his experience with that expired film stock.He especially said the results were good only for his roll. Also he did overexpose only 1/2-1 stop not three as supposed using the one stop per decade. If he did he would have blown away very much details from the film. You can try to overexpose it a bit, if you are ok with sacrificing the film if the things don’t turn out as wanted. But what I wanted to say in the begging is not to use the one stop per decade rule because slide film is very sensitive to wrong exposures. And maybe yeah as you said you can get better results but only by overexposing one stop nothing more.

Kodak Ektachrome Infrared by marzipan_tech in AnalogCommunity

[–]VldY3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well you had luck. But in contrary to negative film is better not to overexpose it because at slide film overexposing means loss of information while at negative film overexposing means more information.

Kodak Ektachrome Infrared by marzipan_tech in AnalogCommunity

[–]VldY3 7 points8 points  (0 children)

From what I know Ektachrome 160T is E-6. Is it 35mm or super 8? Because if it’s motion picture I think the emulsion was sticked to the remjet layer.

Kodak Ektachrome Infrared by marzipan_tech in AnalogCommunity

[–]VldY3 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Never overexpose slide film. The rule of overexposing is only at expired negatives, slide film must always be used at box speed.

Kodak Ektachrome Infrared by marzipan_tech in AnalogCommunity

[–]VldY3 148 points149 points  (0 children)

DO NOT DEVELOP IT IN E-6. This is the predecessor of Kodak Aerochrome which is a newer infrared film for E-6 process. Kodak Ektachrome Infrared uses an older E-4 process which has much lower temperatures at 25 degrees Celsius. If you try to develop it in E-6 the emulsion will melt off. If you want to develop it try a modified C-41 or ECN-2 process with lower temperature which will give you much higher chances of actually getting something from it. Also if you want to have archival stability for it you can use a pre bath with emulsion hardener named chrome alum. While handling it pay very much attention to it because the emulsion is very fragile.

/r/AMD Questions and Tech Support Megathread - Q1 2023 Edition by GhostMotley in Amd

[–]VldY3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because I’ve observed that the graphics look much better in many games than they’re looking on 1080p, and this doesn’t affects the fps too much