I get an EI of 200-250 for Tmax 400 in D761+1 as wqellbut why does that matter to you if you are satisfied with negs and results?if EI250 gives you all you needand has sufficient shadow detail, go for it.
That thread shouldn't be titled "TMY is 250 speed", but "TMY in D-76 full strength is 250 speed". AFAIK box speed is no longer tied to a specific developer. There is a good chance that TMY will reach true ISO 400 speed in a more modern developer, or even D-76 1+3.
A well formulated developer will give you "full emulsion speed". There are some special developers which yield a concave characteristic curve, and as a result can gain a tiny bit more shadow detail without letting contrast go through the roof, but the wiggle room is small. "Full emulsion speed" seems to refer to the maximum speed you can get with a good developer that gives a straight characteristic curve. Both D-76 and TMAX have such a straight characteristic curve, and if TMAX gives you 2/3 stops more than D-76, the latter can't possibly give you "full speed". Bill Burk's measurements seem to confirm this.I'm not following. When you say "full speed", it sounds like you are defining it as "maximum emulsion speed", which is not implied by the ISO standards. There is likely a hard limit to maximum speed for a given emulsion (and of course we would need to define it), but for TMax 100 (just an arbitrary example), that might be considerably higher than its nominal or ISO speed.
The question is: when did Kodak state that? Did they make that statement before TMAX/Microphen/DD-X hit the market? Did they make that statement when the ISO speed definition mandated a specific developer?I assume when Kodak says D-76 yields full emulsion speed with a film - say TMax 100, that they mean you can get 100. And that other developers such as Microphen, XTOL etc. might give you slightly higher speeds.
Note that all/most developers released by Kodak/Ilford/Fuji in the last couple of decades are based on Phenidone/Dimezone-S, too. That was not some fad pursued by Crawley alone.Crawley would tend to lean more in your direction, since he "felt" the true inherent speeds of films were higher than people were all used to at the time. This seems to be based mostly on the fact he was big into Phenidone, which tended to give small increases in properly balanced formulas, vs comparable MQ developers.
In fact, given Stephen's in depth knowledge of speed methods, it might be interesting to look at some of the curves we generated with my experimental high speed/low gamma developers. You may recall at the time I tried to make the point to Alan that all we could really do is compare toe shapes and fixed density points to some reference (XTOL normal CI in my case). ISO, fractional gradient, etc. would all seem to fail in extreme cases like that, and quantification becomes problematic.
I get an EI of 200-250 for Tmax 400 in D76 1+1 as well but why does that matter to you if you are satisfied with negs and results? if EI250 gives you all you need and has sufficient shadow detail, go for it.
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