Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
Member
Has anyone tried this? Does it actually work?
I read the same quote for the first time a few weeks ago and tried it last week. I had bought some 30 years old Soviet era black and white film (Svema Foto 65) and could not find any resouces on the internet at all, at least not in English, on how to develop this film. Neither new, nor taking the age into consideration. It was originally a 65 GOST (72 ASA) Film, so I overexposed by about 2 stops to compensate for the age and did the mentioned 'dip test' in the developer of choice and measured some 13-14 seconds. Following the rule, that should give a 260-280 seconds development time, but I rounded to 300 seconds, 5 minutes, for good faith. If I had just guesstimated a time as a starting point for a test series, I would most probably have given the film a much longer development for a first attempt.
I may of course just have been lucky and to be frank, most black and white films tolerate several stops over- and under-exposure or over- and under-development and will still yield perfectly printable negatives. But perhaps, even if it the test does not give you the exact same time as determined by film manufacturers and published in data sheets for the film or the developer, it is not completely unlikely that it actually gives a rough idea on how fast a film reacts in a specific developer and can be used as a starting point for further optimizations.
So I gave the Svema 65 a bath for five minutes in the developer and actually got very usable negatives. Being so old, the negatives had of course a relatively high level of fog and the negatives were perhaps a little bit less contrasty than ideal, but they look perfectly usable. I haven't tried to wet-print them yet, but scanned, they show really nice tonality throughout the density range:

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