Like most, I had not wondered. I believed what I had been taught. Except I noticed that it's possible to use the curve that's to the left of the ISO speed-point of 0.10 above B+F, especially when scanning.
It appears that Delta-X is based on ISO CI (= deltaD/1.3), and shifts the speed-point left by a quadratic approximation, coming close to the gradient method's point. Or did I misunderstand it? Anyway, Delta-X looks simple. And seeing that it's more accurate, why wasn't it adopted? Committee politics?
BTW, I thought the standard CI was 0.58, but 0.8/1.3 = 0.62. Did I miss something?
Mark Overton
It was adopted. It's the ISO standard. Standard's don't have to explain theory. They just need to explain how to do something. In the case of the ISO speed standard explains how to test for black and white negative film speed,. People see the contrast parameter and believe it represents normal development and don't question why it's really there. They also see the fixed density point and believe it's a universal speed point good for all occasions when the standard only says it's good when the contrast parameters are met. I guess it wouldn't have hurt anything if the standard had at least included the Nelson and Simonds paper in their bibliography.
Concerning the contrast parameters of the standard, no you didn't miss anything. Good catch actually. .The answer is, they are not supposed to represent normal development. One of the ideas of speed testing is have method that can be applicable to the range of emulsions on the market. An oranges to oranges comparison. Under the ISO contrast parameters, the approximate fractional gradient point will always fall 0.297 log-H units to the left of the fixed density point. Oranges to oranges. As you can see from the examples in the previous post, the speed is based on gradient and not density. The speed value isn't going to change when the film is developed to the slightly lower CI.
One more thing about the parameters. The results are dependent on the methodology used. Conceptually, it's the same idea that Jones and later Nelson and Simonds faced when determining a speed methodology. Which method works best. With contrast determination, there are basically three different methods generally used. Kodak's CI, Ilford's G-bar, and Agfa's continued use of Gamma. Using each of the different methods on the same curve will most likely yield different results. So the results are based on the measurement.
The ISO contrast parameters according to Nelson and Simonds, "was chosen in order that D
2 would be approximately equal to the highlight density in the first excellent negative of an average scene. The difference, D
2-D
1 is call ΔD." The 1.30 log-H range makes a difference depending on the type of emulsion. While the gradient of 0.80 / 1.30 equals 0.61, it will only match the CI of the film if the film is short toed. Longer toed films need to have a higher CI to match the ISO's ΔD. I've seen it to be around 0.67 or so.
There also isn't a standard CI. There is a CI based on the statistically average Luminance Range, printing on a grade 2 paper on a diffusion enlarger / contact print, and average flare. That would be:
Log Subject Luminance Range: 2.20
Aim LER: 1.05
Flare: 0.40
Flare is interesting. Kodak used to have CI 0.56 as their Normal. Around the time of Dick Dickerson, they started publishing it as 0.58. I believe they changed their value of average flare because of the greater use of small formats which tend to have more lens elements and higher flare. Since his departure, I've noticed that when Kodak retests the films ISO (like when they changed to a new coating alley), the published aim CIs I tended to see for normal processing fell back to 0.56. I haven't really spent much time on it, so maybe it's just a confirmation bias.
I'm glad you touched on this. I'm thinking about writing a post on the subject of developmental models as this thread is partly about curve interpretation. I've found that while the use of the term Normal might be ubiquitous, it is often not well understood or wrongly interpreted using the film curve. Calculating the pluses and minuses can be more involved that first realized too. It's an interesting topic and really what the whole curve plotting is about.