Alex Benjamin
Subscriber
Just curious.
As I mentioned in another thread, I recently discovered, quite accidentally, that my thermometer was one to two degrees off, which explained why I wasn't getting the negs I was expecting from past experience with the same film/developer combo.
So, replaced the dial thermometer with a digital cooking thermometer. So now, on the display, I have 1/10th of a degree Celcius, very precise, but, I'm starting to wonder, too precise?
Putting it another way. If I have a 10 minute development time for a chemistry at 20 degrees C, I know I must to about 9 minutes if my chemistry is at 21 degrees. Now what happens if my reading gives me 20,5 degrees? Do I keep 10, go to 9, or split in half and choose 9:30 as my development time?
I've actually answered my own question and decided to split the time in half in such a case, with anything under 0,4 being rounded downwards, and above 0,6 upwards. Don't think it makes that much of a difference, but I'm the type to like all his "i"s dotted and "t"s crossed and being a bit anal about it - at least as far as photography and the photographic process is concern.
So, out of curiosity, how many are on the psycho-rigid side of things concerning temperature, and how many have a life's-too-short attitude?
As I mentioned in another thread, I recently discovered, quite accidentally, that my thermometer was one to two degrees off, which explained why I wasn't getting the negs I was expecting from past experience with the same film/developer combo.
So, replaced the dial thermometer with a digital cooking thermometer. So now, on the display, I have 1/10th of a degree Celcius, very precise, but, I'm starting to wonder, too precise?
Putting it another way. If I have a 10 minute development time for a chemistry at 20 degrees C, I know I must to about 9 minutes if my chemistry is at 21 degrees. Now what happens if my reading gives me 20,5 degrees? Do I keep 10, go to 9, or split in half and choose 9:30 as my development time?
I've actually answered my own question and decided to split the time in half in such a case, with anything under 0,4 being rounded downwards, and above 0,6 upwards. Don't think it makes that much of a difference, but I'm the type to like all his "i"s dotted and "t"s crossed and being a bit anal about it - at least as far as photography and the photographic process is concern.
So, out of curiosity, how many are on the psycho-rigid side of things concerning temperature, and how many have a life's-too-short attitude?