Adrian Bacon
Subscriber
I thought I'd post this if anybody is interested in discussing it.
I'm switching over to Ilford's Ilfotec DD developer from a replenished Kodak XTOL scheme for black and white film development in my processing lab. I use JOBOs with 1500 series tanks and run at 24C. I just got my first batch of DD concentrate in earlier this week and mixed up an initial 2 Liter bottle of working solution. The bottle actually holds ~2.4 liters of working solution once you fill up the neck of the bottle. I couldn't get any starter solution, so this post is documenting how to season a bottle from fresh full strength working solution and what to expect. I found it attractive because the concentrate is used to make the working solution and is also the replenisher, just like how XTOL works. It has a lower replenishment rate of 50ml per 135-36 roll of film compared to the 70ml rate of XTOL.
I use Ilford FP4+ control strips and an X-Rite transmission densitometer to monitor activity.
According to the DD tech sheet, a difference of 0.80 between the HD and LD patches is in control. The process time for the control strip is 8:30 at 24C. Also, as a final note, Ilfotec DD is not DD-X. It's very similar, but not exactly the same.
First processing run:
3 rolls of 36 exposure BW film in 600ml of developer, test exposures of a grey exposure card, a variety exposure levels, all different emulsion types, plus a control strip. Run it for 8:30, stop, fix in Ilford rapid fixer.
Control Strip Densities:
DMAX 2.07
HD 1.48
LD 0.51
DMIN 0.3
HD-LD 0.97
At 0.97, a pretty hot mix.
OK, mix up 150ml of replenisher, pour it into the working solution, top the bottle off with the 600ml used developer and discard the excess.
Second run:
3 rolls of 24 exposure BW film in 600ml of developer, same as above, test exposures, etc, plus a control strip. Run it for 8:30, stop, fix.
Densities:
DMAX 2.03
HD 1.45
LD 0.50
DMIN 0.30
HD-LD 0.95
Wasn't expecting much difference, but there is a difference.
Mix up 100ml replenisher, pour it into working solution, again, top off with the 600ml used developer and discard the excess.
Third run:
3 rolls of 36 exposure test rolls in 600ml of developer, same scenario as above with a control strip.
Densities:
DMAX 1.93
HD 1.41
LD 0.51
DMIN 0.32
HD-LD 0.90
OK. Starting to come down. Not bad.
Mix up 150ml replenisher, wash rinse repeat.
Fourth run:
3 rolls of 36 exposure in 600ml developer with a control strip. Same processing time and temperature as before.
Densities:
DMAX 1.84
HD 1.33
LD 0.48
DMIN 0.31
HD-LD 0.85
Approaching strike zone. The question is will it keep falling below 0.80 or settle at ~0.80?
Mix up 150ml replenisher, wash rinse repeat.
Fifth run:
3 rolls 36 exposure in 600ml developer with a control strip. Same as above.
Densities:
DMAX 1.78
HD 1.27
LD 0.46
DMIN 0.30
HD-LD 0.81
Boom. There it is. OK, let's do one more run and see what it does.
Mix up 150ml replenisher, wash rinse, repeat.
Sixth run:
3 rolls of 24 exposure in 600ml developer with control strip. Same as above.
Densities:
DMAX 1.80
HD 1.28
LD 0.46
DMIN 0.31
HD-LD 0.82
I'd say we're in the butter zone and have a fully seasoned bottle of go juice.
Mix up 100ml replenisher, wash rinse, repeat.
Ilford's documentation is pretty much right on the money.
OK. Next steps is to work out what Ilford defines as "normal contrast" for Ilford films so I can make a matching scanning profile, and verify that their times for listed Kodak films result in the same contrast, and if not, what that contrast is, then start working out process control times for films not listed in the DD manual (like Foma films, etc).
I think for DD I'm just going to use Ilford's listed times and not go through the exercise of working out times for each film to get exactly the same contrast and speed. Doing that is a lot of fun, but also a lot of work, and I only did it because Kodak's documentation was pretty far off for a good number of emulsions. If I find that Ilford's is too, I might have to deviate, but for now, that's the plan.
Questions, Comments, Whatever... Fire away... I'll probably post some sample images if people want to see what it looks like. I've got pretty much every commonly available BW emulsion on hand, so it won't be that big of a deal to shoot some standard test shots and run it through as I have time. Just ask.
I'm switching over to Ilford's Ilfotec DD developer from a replenished Kodak XTOL scheme for black and white film development in my processing lab. I use JOBOs with 1500 series tanks and run at 24C. I just got my first batch of DD concentrate in earlier this week and mixed up an initial 2 Liter bottle of working solution. The bottle actually holds ~2.4 liters of working solution once you fill up the neck of the bottle. I couldn't get any starter solution, so this post is documenting how to season a bottle from fresh full strength working solution and what to expect. I found it attractive because the concentrate is used to make the working solution and is also the replenisher, just like how XTOL works. It has a lower replenishment rate of 50ml per 135-36 roll of film compared to the 70ml rate of XTOL.
I use Ilford FP4+ control strips and an X-Rite transmission densitometer to monitor activity.
According to the DD tech sheet, a difference of 0.80 between the HD and LD patches is in control. The process time for the control strip is 8:30 at 24C. Also, as a final note, Ilfotec DD is not DD-X. It's very similar, but not exactly the same.
First processing run:
3 rolls of 36 exposure BW film in 600ml of developer, test exposures of a grey exposure card, a variety exposure levels, all different emulsion types, plus a control strip. Run it for 8:30, stop, fix in Ilford rapid fixer.
Control Strip Densities:
DMAX 2.07
HD 1.48
LD 0.51
DMIN 0.3
HD-LD 0.97
At 0.97, a pretty hot mix.
OK, mix up 150ml of replenisher, pour it into the working solution, top the bottle off with the 600ml used developer and discard the excess.
Second run:
3 rolls of 24 exposure BW film in 600ml of developer, same as above, test exposures, etc, plus a control strip. Run it for 8:30, stop, fix.
Densities:
DMAX 2.03
HD 1.45
LD 0.50
DMIN 0.30
HD-LD 0.95
Wasn't expecting much difference, but there is a difference.
Mix up 100ml replenisher, pour it into working solution, again, top off with the 600ml used developer and discard the excess.
Third run:
3 rolls of 36 exposure test rolls in 600ml of developer, same scenario as above with a control strip.
Densities:
DMAX 1.93
HD 1.41
LD 0.51
DMIN 0.32
HD-LD 0.90
OK. Starting to come down. Not bad.
Mix up 150ml replenisher, wash rinse repeat.
Fourth run:
3 rolls of 36 exposure in 600ml developer with a control strip. Same processing time and temperature as before.
Densities:
DMAX 1.84
HD 1.33
LD 0.48
DMIN 0.31
HD-LD 0.85
Approaching strike zone. The question is will it keep falling below 0.80 or settle at ~0.80?
Mix up 150ml replenisher, wash rinse repeat.
Fifth run:
3 rolls 36 exposure in 600ml developer with a control strip. Same as above.
Densities:
DMAX 1.78
HD 1.27
LD 0.46
DMIN 0.30
HD-LD 0.81
Boom. There it is. OK, let's do one more run and see what it does.
Mix up 150ml replenisher, wash rinse, repeat.
Sixth run:
3 rolls of 24 exposure in 600ml developer with control strip. Same as above.
Densities:
DMAX 1.80
HD 1.28
LD 0.46
DMIN 0.31
HD-LD 0.82
I'd say we're in the butter zone and have a fully seasoned bottle of go juice.
Mix up 100ml replenisher, wash rinse, repeat.
Ilford's documentation is pretty much right on the money.
OK. Next steps is to work out what Ilford defines as "normal contrast" for Ilford films so I can make a matching scanning profile, and verify that their times for listed Kodak films result in the same contrast, and if not, what that contrast is, then start working out process control times for films not listed in the DD manual (like Foma films, etc).
I think for DD I'm just going to use Ilford's listed times and not go through the exercise of working out times for each film to get exactly the same contrast and speed. Doing that is a lot of fun, but also a lot of work, and I only did it because Kodak's documentation was pretty far off for a good number of emulsions. If I find that Ilford's is too, I might have to deviate, but for now, that's the plan.
Questions, Comments, Whatever... Fire away... I'll probably post some sample images if people want to see what it looks like. I've got pretty much every commonly available BW emulsion on hand, so it won't be that big of a deal to shoot some standard test shots and run it through as I have time. Just ask.