....Sure you want to do this ?
....
The only problem you might have is that replenishment likes regular use. If you are looking at tanks to do lots of film every once in a while, then maybe one-shot is a better deal. In that case, XTOL still wins, say, 1+1.
good luck
BOWZART ?
PE ??
/d
I haven't done much of this in a very long time now, but used to do customers E4 and C-22 (well, that is SUCH ancient history; those were the precursors to E6 and C-41 - that tells you how long it has been).
If you are proficient with "ASA standard agitation" which if it still exists would have to be "ISO standard agitation" now, use it. Can I recall? Seems to me you plunge the basket into the tank, move it up and down for a period of time (can't remember, but I'm guessing something like 15 seconds), being sure to bang the basket to dislodge bubbles, and then at (I will say) one minute intervals, lift the basket out, tilt either forward or back, then re-immerse, lift out and tilt the other way, put it back with a bang. Lift out 15 seconds before plunging it into the stop. If this isn't exactly what it was, it ought to be close enough.
Yes, you can get good and consistent results. When I was doing it my technique had to stand up not only to a critical employer hovering over a hot densitometer, but customer scrutiny. Since the customers were dependent upon ME for their livelihoods, I must have been doing ok. It is most important, of course, to do it the same way every time. You can vary from someone else's norm, but when you get something that works right, stick with it.
I would caution against over agitation. I'd be very reluctant to use 30 second cycles, and err on the gentle side rather than the violent. You can get edge build up and unevenness from turbulence behind the wires.
Don Normark (
http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/chavezravine/album.html) has been processing Tri X roll film, both 35mm and 120, in a tank line using Beutler's for I'd guess 60 years now. He uses the developer one shot. Also, he mixes the stock solution with no reducing agent, adds that when he's ready to go. I wouldn't go to that extreme, probably, since I know the secret about wine boxes. Don's technique is flawless. Let's see. How many four drawer filing cabinets full of negatives does he have?
DF's caution about replenished lines requiring fairly constant use is to be taken very seriously.