Dear ooze,
The '10 seconds' originates from our initial product design stages of MULTIGRADE IV emulsions where exposure times of between 8 and 10 seconds - maximised the products stability and lessened any chances of reciprocity issues. This figure was arrived at by our technical service department after an array of tests to determine the absolute optimum exposure time. But what does it mean in real terms ? well it is a start point and you really should try and avoid either too short or too long exposure times, so 10 seconds is fine, but so is extending the exposure for a variety of reasons such as lens optimal performance, f8 f11 is usually best. You may have a neg that needs a lot of shading and dodging when 10 seconds is too short. I have frequently produced a negative of such poor quality that I have had exposures of over two minutes with all the work I have needed to do. With earlier variable contrast emulsions you also would want to minimise safelight time but with MGIV its safelight performance is fantastic. If you are also making very large mural prints your exposure time can be really quite long, I can remember exposing for several minutes, in this case reciprocity does kick in for sure, but as always 'test twice / print once' and you will be fine. So the 10 seconds.... it is very much a guide, nothing more.
In the tech service note that you put the link on we also refer to MULTIGRADE Express, please note that this product you can indeed expose down to 40 miliseconds but this is a product designed ( and sold ) to labs or for specialist applications, but you can also expose that at up to 20 seconds without any issue.
Hope that helps.
Simon. ILFORD Photo / HARMAN tcehnology Limited :