Jmal, I'm sure you didn't intend to mean that the Kodak times are the proper ones, but I just wanted to open up the testing issue.
One testing method that I've been using that doesn't take much time, nor is complex to figure out is the following one:
* Let's say you're testing Tri-X
* Pick up a big flat black cardboard, and set it up outside under even light. The reason why you pick a black one is so that you can have a useable range of shutter stops to work with.
* Meter the cardboard at 400 ISO, this would give you a Zone V reading. Reduce you camera exposure by five stops. This will give you a Zone 0.
* Put the lens cap on the lens, and take a shot. This is a blank exposure.
* Remove the cap, focus at infinity so that there is no texture showing in the card, and take a shot. This is Zone 0.
* Repeat the (Open up one stop, take a shot) procedure ten times. To make sure I don't run out of f-stops, I always set the Zone 0 exposure to the smallest f-stop on my lens (e.g. f/22), and keep my shutter speed constant until I run out of f-stops. Then I choose a lower shutter speed and do the remaining exposures.
* You now have on your film the following sequence: Blank, Zone 0, Zone I...X. Finish the rest of the roll taking pictures as you usually do.
* Choose one developer, one temperature, one agitation method, and pick a starting time that is short enough, let's say 6mins. Develop, stop, fix, wash, dry.
* You will now make a contact of your first roll. Setup your enlarger head high enough so that the illuminated rectangle is much bigger than your negatives+paper+glass sandwich. Mark the height. Focus the edges. Make a test strip to get proper exposure on grade 2 (or grade 3 if you like contrastier prints). Proper exposure means minimum time to get full black on the blank exposure. Use RC paper, and develop for a minute and a half in print developer at recommended dilution. Stop, fix, dry, and examine.
* When you have two areas in your test strip that are indistinguishably black, take the first time that gave such black. Make your contact sheet for the entire negative using this time, and process as above.
* Now you can have a first sense of whether your Exposure Index (EI) and your development times are correct for the present paper and grade. First, look at the grey scale, and find the first grey that's clearly distinct from black. It might be difficult to judge, but it's a perceptual judgement, not an objective one. If the Zone II exposure is the one, then your EI and metering method is accurate, and you can use 400 as your EI. If it's Zone III, then you should use 200 as your EI, etc. (That's the "expose for the shadows" part)
* Next, find the last grey that is distinct from pure white. Count the total number of greys that are therefore neither pure black nor pure white. If you have seven of them, your development is correct. If you have less, you need to develop longer; if you have more, you need to develop less. (That's the "develop for the highlights" part). Try a 20% change next time if your time was not appropriate.
* So now you finally have a sense of what your EI should be, and which direction you should go to develop your film next time. Repeat the test as many times as is needed to get your seven grays on paper, and that will give you a procedure that can handle normal tone reproduction of average scenes. By having a look at the other photos you took on that roll, you should immediately see which ones are over/under exposed.
* There's also a projection test procedure, but I don't have it in mind, and it's mostly useful for condenser enlargers, given that an enlarged negative on such an enlarger may be more contrasty than a contact.
* Once you're done with that theoretical work, you know that you will get enough shadow details and highlights that don't blow out in general when you print on your chosen grade. If you have a particularly flat scene (e.g. dark rocks on a misty day), then you should be able to print it using a higher grade of paper. In the odd case that you have a very high contrast scene (e.g. you are photographing both a white dress in sunlight and a dark suit in shadow), then I would advise just use a different light than fussing around with development. But if you really must, then you basically need to expose more (e.g. use an EI of 100) and develop less (e.g. 4 minutes).
One testing method that I've been using that doesn't take much time, nor is complex to figure out is the following one:
* Let's say you're testing Tri-X
* Pick up a big flat black cardboard, and set it up outside under even light. The reason why you pick a black one is so that you can have a useable range of shutter stops to work with.
* Meter the cardboard at 400 ISO, this would give you a Zone V reading. Reduce you camera exposure by five stops. This will give you a Zone 0.
* Put the lens cap on the lens, and take a shot. This is a blank exposure.
* Remove the cap, focus at infinity so that there is no texture showing in the card, and take a shot. This is Zone 0.
* Repeat the (Open up one stop, take a shot) procedure ten times. To make sure I don't run out of f-stops, I always set the Zone 0 exposure to the smallest f-stop on my lens (e.g. f/22), and keep my shutter speed constant until I run out of f-stops. Then I choose a lower shutter speed and do the remaining exposures.
* You now have on your film the following sequence: Blank, Zone 0, Zone I...X. Finish the rest of the roll taking pictures as you usually do.
* Choose one developer, one temperature, one agitation method, and pick a starting time that is short enough, let's say 6mins. Develop, stop, fix, wash, dry.
* You will now make a contact of your first roll. Setup your enlarger head high enough so that the illuminated rectangle is much bigger than your negatives+paper+glass sandwich. Mark the height. Focus the edges. Make a test strip to get proper exposure on grade 2 (or grade 3 if you like contrastier prints). Proper exposure means minimum time to get full black on the blank exposure. Use RC paper, and develop for a minute and a half in print developer at recommended dilution. Stop, fix, dry, and examine.
* When you have two areas in your test strip that are indistinguishably black, take the first time that gave such black. Make your contact sheet for the entire negative using this time, and process as above.
* Now you can have a first sense of whether your Exposure Index (EI) and your development times are correct for the present paper and grade. First, look at the grey scale, and find the first grey that's clearly distinct from black. It might be difficult to judge, but it's a perceptual judgement, not an objective one. If the Zone II exposure is the one, then your EI and metering method is accurate, and you can use 400 as your EI. If it's Zone III, then you should use 200 as your EI, etc. (That's the "expose for the shadows" part)
* Next, find the last grey that is distinct from pure white. Count the total number of greys that are therefore neither pure black nor pure white. If you have seven of them, your development is correct. If you have less, you need to develop longer; if you have more, you need to develop less. (That's the "develop for the highlights" part). Try a 20% change next time if your time was not appropriate.
* So now you finally have a sense of what your EI should be, and which direction you should go to develop your film next time. Repeat the test as many times as is needed to get your seven grays on paper, and that will give you a procedure that can handle normal tone reproduction of average scenes. By having a look at the other photos you took on that roll, you should immediately see which ones are over/under exposed.
* There's also a projection test procedure, but I don't have it in mind, and it's mostly useful for condenser enlargers, given that an enlarged negative on such an enlarger may be more contrasty than a contact.
* Once you're done with that theoretical work, you know that you will get enough shadow details and highlights that don't blow out in general when you print on your chosen grade. If you have a particularly flat scene (e.g. dark rocks on a misty day), then you should be able to print it using a higher grade of paper. In the odd case that you have a very high contrast scene (e.g. you are photographing both a white dress in sunlight and a dark suit in shadow), then I would advise just use a different light than fussing around with development. But if you really must, then you basically need to expose more (e.g. use an EI of 100) and develop less (e.g. 4 minutes).