DREW WILEY
Member
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2011
- Messages
- 13,842
- Format
- 8x10 Format
The notable difference, Milpool, is when you try to significantly boost the gamma contrast of Acros. Then all bets are off. Acros is relatively limited in that respect. And you can't borrow as much real estate at the lower end as with TMax films.
Otherwise, there is something strange about your plots. In real-world usage I've found Acros unable to handle 11 stop ranges without resorting to compression development, which flattens midtone values. There's still too much of a toe to it, although the new II is a little more capable in that respect. I have abundant experience with the difference. In the deep woods under open sunlight, I often encounter 11-12 stop lighting ranges. The only fine-grain roll films which can handle the full scope are TMX100 and the late great Ekfe 25. With larger grain sheet films, the now extinct Bergger 200 was wonderful, and Super XX before that; today the closest thing is TMY400 (I omit Foma "200" due to its difficulty handling long exposures).
The problem with TMax developer is that the correct version for sheet film was TMaxRS, no longer made. And to get the best straight line with that, you had to use it full strength - expensive!
Otherwise, there is something strange about your plots. In real-world usage I've found Acros unable to handle 11 stop ranges without resorting to compression development, which flattens midtone values. There's still too much of a toe to it, although the new II is a little more capable in that respect. I have abundant experience with the difference. In the deep woods under open sunlight, I often encounter 11-12 stop lighting ranges. The only fine-grain roll films which can handle the full scope are TMX100 and the late great Ekfe 25. With larger grain sheet films, the now extinct Bergger 200 was wonderful, and Super XX before that; today the closest thing is TMY400 (I omit Foma "200" due to its difficulty handling long exposures).
The problem with TMax developer is that the correct version for sheet film was TMaxRS, no longer made. And to get the best straight line with that, you had to use it full strength - expensive!