I'm intrigued to maybe try and change my development time, to compensate for the temperature, when I'm actually doing the development. Instead of mixing cool water from the refrigerator, to the standard 68*.. that I have been doing. But if one did this, how does one compensate for agitation?
That variable, from a true and tried development work pattern that has been successful, would seem to me, like playing Russian Roulette!
As and example lets say development time at 68* is 8.5 min, agitation for about 3sec every 30 sec.
Which after initial agitation.. there would be 15 times that the tank is agitated, and not doing an agitation at 8.5 as the developer drained out.
Using Ifords Compensation chart
http://www.ilfordphoto.com/Webfiles/2006210208211880.pdf
@ 75* it would be 6.0 min
One could work the time sequence,, so one could agitate it 15 times within the 6.0min, but wouldn't that blow it away... (become to contrasty and lose the highlights) so how do you compensate, consistently with a temperature change, that may be different later in the day, or on a cooler day or warmer day?
That variable, from a true and tried development work pattern that has been successful, would seem to me, like playing Russian Roulette!
As and example lets say development time at 68* is 8.5 min, agitation for about 3sec every 30 sec.
Which after initial agitation.. there would be 15 times that the tank is agitated, and not doing an agitation at 8.5 as the developer drained out.
Using Ifords Compensation chart
http://www.ilfordphoto.com/Webfiles/2006210208211880.pdf
@ 75* it would be 6.0 min
One could work the time sequence,, so one could agitate it 15 times within the 6.0min, but wouldn't that blow it away... (become to contrasty and lose the highlights) so how do you compensate, consistently with a temperature change, that may be different later in the day, or on a cooler day or warmer day?


