It's been a rough week for film mishaps at my place. I managed to make a mistake mounting a lens, so that the meter didn't couple properly, and I shot a roll of HP5+ (in 120) at what I would guess was about EI 50-100, with a lot of variation between shots. It's not the end of the world---they're just ordinary photos of my son climbing trees---but I'd like to do what I can to salvage usable images.
I'm thinking HC-110 dilution H, with reduced agitation; basically I want to compensate, compensate, and compensate some more. I realize I'm going to get flattened negatives that may sc*n better than they print, or at least need very hard printing to look decent---I can live with that. I don't care about grain but I'd like to preserve sharpness to the extent possible (hence I don't want to use Perceptol, which seems to be a common recommendation for this kind of extreme pull).
Does anyone have starting-point times for dilution H in this kind of situation? Any general advice or thoughts that might be helpful? Again, this isn't a critical roll so I'm OK with using it for mad-science experiments.
Thanks
-NT
I'm thinking HC-110 dilution H, with reduced agitation; basically I want to compensate, compensate, and compensate some more. I realize I'm going to get flattened negatives that may sc*n better than they print, or at least need very hard printing to look decent---I can live with that. I don't care about grain but I'd like to preserve sharpness to the extent possible (hence I don't want to use Perceptol, which seems to be a common recommendation for this kind of extreme pull).
Does anyone have starting-point times for dilution H in this kind of situation? Any general advice or thoughts that might be helpful? Again, this isn't a critical roll so I'm OK with using it for mad-science experiments.
Thanks
-NT

