srs5694
Member
Expose a sheet to a mid gray without any filter, then dial in some cyan, and print again. You'll find out how significant the effect of cyan filtration is. Filters have density. C60 has more density than C90. That's why the cyan filter isused by some as a neutral-density filter. No further data required!
As I've stated several times, I can't perform this test because my enlarger is a Philips Tri-Color unit with separate red, green, and blue channels; I have no cyan filter with which to test. Of course, I could go out and buy a whole new enlarger, or at least a cyan filter and enough other equipment to refit my current enlarger, but that's overkill to resolve a question that's unimportant to me personally.
So basically, you're saying that cyan filtration has a significant effect on B&W exposure, but you've provided no details and you haven't even explicitly said that you've performed the experiment you recommend I perform. That leaves a big question in my mind about how significant the effect is. Does 100cc of cyan filtration reduce exposure by 1 stop? 1/3 stop? 1/10 stop? Less? It could also vary from one enlarger to another. Furthermore, there might be green/blue differences in a cyan filter, which could affect contrast -- perhaps not on all enlargers, but maybe in some. For these reasons, I stick to my recommendation to not rely on cyan filtration as neutral density for B&W printing, at least not without performing extensive testing to figure out what the enlarger and filter in question actually do.