That sounds good for the Rollei IR400. Like gijsbert, I prefered +5 and +6, but +7 seemed okay for me. I've only scanned so far, and I've more IR negatives, but haven't scanned them (and I may just print them instead of scanning).
Here is a thread I had started some time ago on the subject:
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
I had used the Rollei Retro 400s, but have had similar results with the Rollei 400 IR (there have been debates on the names of the film and whether it is exactly the same - but effectively it seems to be).
In that thread I posted a few pictures I uploaded to Picasaweb (now redone by Google). I did one shot without a filter, and then bracketed using a Hoya R72. I was doing a quick test, messed up developing a bit, and there is one set where I forgot to put the filter on after focusing. Here are the photos.
https://get.google.com/albumarchive...RvAISFcRyq?source=pwa&authKey=CNzwpYmxzMPbmwE
If you click a picture to view it individually, the notes show shutter speed, aperture, and about what I think the exposure was (I'm not good at this, lol). I found +5 to +7 did well (5 to 7 stops correction). These were in 35mm, on a tripod.
Thank you.Yes, 5 stops already works quite well, 6 gives the shadows a bit more definition but I prefer higher shutter speeds with 5 stops.
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