OK.....
Im going to throw my 2cents in here just to hear - a) Im crazy, or b) Im a genious, and c) Crazy genious with a few flaws in the system {and hope you explain those to me so I can learn sumthin}
I set up a regular piece of paper on a wall, evenly illuminated by two lights @ approx. 45deg to the surface (I set up each light individually, using incidental metering to get some even f/# combo -usu. f/5.6 @ 1/2 sec)
When both lights are on, the exposure, incident metered, is idealy f/8, 1/2 sec @ factory ISO.
I then switch to a 1deg spot meter.
What's on the paper - regular inkjet print on regular paper, a target containing a WIDE range of tones... I found this weird graph on the internet that shows the relative strengths of field forces in gray scale... nevermind that... basicaly you want something that has at least ten steps ranging from dead black, to paper base white, and steps in between... (when I get home Ill try to upload my target image to this thread)
The target is basicaly a print out of a step wedge, the more steps, the better, I believe the tar
I then read off the target with the 1deg spot meter the proper exposure for the lowest value, middle value, and highest value. Now I have the zone V exposure info for all the values on the page in front of the camera.
I set up the cam perpendicular to the plane of the paper, and take a shot at 3EV below the zone V reading for the darkest band, then one shot at the zone V reading for the middle band, and one shot 3EV over the reading for the pure paper base white band...
Waltz over to the dark room, and process to what I consider "normal" for the dev/film combo. If I have no Idea what that should be, I just start with six minutes, and keep going up till I like the results on the negs. In the ideal dev. time, I should not loose the darkest band at the low end of the scale for my first shot, have a full spread for the second, and not loose the lstep between the lightest two bands at the high end for the third shot...
Repeat above ad nauseum.
Those negs which appear to have a distinct band for each of the bands on the target get taken into the dark room and printed, or taken to the scanner, and measured with the flatbed's "densitometer" . .. there, Im looking to be able to measure a diff. between all the bands... as well as register base + fog... and the .15 step up to zone I.
One of the nice things about shooting the equivalent of a step wedge onto film is that I KNOW what the exposure steps are between my bands... so if I start to loose bands on either the high end of the tones or low end of the tones, I know Im either pushing or pulling the film (and approx how much in EV) . . . for it's given ISO. When I have all the bands, I consider that I've reached "normal" development.
I havent taken the steps all the way thru with the print speed testing. . . i.e. I understand that I should use a step wedge and get my "normal" print times for paper/dev combos, THEN print my "normal" negs to the "normal" time on paper...
Still, having confidence that Im getting a normal neg encourages me to feel that Im walking into the dark room with what I need to start with for the best possible prints... no use trying to get beautiful tones with a blocked/underexposed neg.