Ian Grant
Subscriber
Micro reticulation
This is in fact the problem, it's not necessarily the whole of the Tmax family. Perhaps just Tmax 400, which is where I've seen problems and also heard others report of having an excessive grain problem that were temperature related.
I know Mark's now away but he should be aware that there were a few discussions here way back around 2004 on this issue, and there have been previous discussions elsewhere all confirming that there is a temperature related increase in graininess And yes I deliberately steered this thread back to this issue because it needs a consensus conclusion.
My gut feelings after yesterdays brief reading of Kodak documents is they are saying it's what's happened at the "rather less than perfect surface . . . . after processing" that Ron mentions, and that this is in fact the key at two levels.
Firstly - the slight gain in image quality when reasonably tight temperature tolerances are adhered to.
Secondly - the increased sometimes excessive graininess seen with some films with temperature deviations (probably over 5ºC) during poor or unmonitored steps after development.
So far I have 3 pointers that I'm well on the right track
1: Kodak graded Reticulation, from Slight to Severe, to describe the reticulation observed using the new hardeners They also claim to be reducing reticulation not eliminating it.
2: The Stress in the Gelatin surface cause variations in the final position of Silver after drying. (Kodak paper, no verifiable modern references all internal Report or messages).
3: Microscopic surface reticulation is acknowledged to exist.
1 & 3 are the more important, and 2 is probably only relevant in more extreme cases and is a late 1990's link between reticulation and grain clumping, although it doesn't use those terms.
So a question Ron how important was the surface quality in coating films ?
Ian
Very specific films such as the T-Max family have been most quoted.
PE
This is in fact the problem, it's not necessarily the whole of the Tmax family. Perhaps just Tmax 400, which is where I've seen problems and also heard others report of having an excessive grain problem that were temperature related.
I know Mark's now away but he should be aware that there were a few discussions here way back around 2004 on this issue, and there have been previous discussions elsewhere all confirming that there is a temperature related increase in graininess And yes I deliberately steered this thread back to this issue because it needs a consensus conclusion.
I'm afraid that all films have a rather less than perfect surface both before and after processing. The article in question wants to laminate one plate to another. To do so with perfection, one would have to smooth out these imperfections by somehow shaving the surface. So, that is one interpretation of this abstract.
PE
My gut feelings after yesterdays brief reading of Kodak documents is they are saying it's what's happened at the "rather less than perfect surface . . . . after processing" that Ron mentions, and that this is in fact the key at two levels.
Firstly - the slight gain in image quality when reasonably tight temperature tolerances are adhered to.
Secondly - the increased sometimes excessive graininess seen with some films with temperature deviations (probably over 5ºC) during poor or unmonitored steps after development.
So far I have 3 pointers that I'm well on the right track
1: Kodak graded Reticulation, from Slight to Severe, to describe the reticulation observed using the new hardeners They also claim to be reducing reticulation not eliminating it.
2: The Stress in the Gelatin surface cause variations in the final position of Silver after drying. (Kodak paper, no verifiable modern references all internal Report or messages).
3: Microscopic surface reticulation is acknowledged to exist.
1 & 3 are the more important, and 2 is probably only relevant in more extreme cases and is a late 1990's link between reticulation and grain clumping, although it doesn't use those terms.
So a question Ron how important was the surface quality in coating films ?
Ian