Nihil Abstat
Member
ISO400.
Almost every serious B&W worker uses more exposure than indicated by ISO speed. It took me a while to learn this, but I did learn it.
ISO400.
Thanks for the education on HC110 dilutions. I just didn't know enough about what is possible. I have learn't something.
pentaxuser
hi wiltw ..
sure, they say it is possible .. pretty much anything is possible .. but not optimal ...
were all these rolls of tri x you developed in dilution b done for 3.6 minutes, or did you use a longer time ?
my (uneducated) guess is they were developed for longer than 3.6 mins
I never had to develop for low contrast, so 5.3 min was standard for me!
For someone wanting 'low contrast' on Tri-X in HC-110 dil B, Kodak computer says 5.3 minutes at 60F degrees
I never had to develop for low contrast, so 5.3 min was standard for me!
For someone wanting 'low contrast' on Tri-X in HC-110 dil B, Kodak computer says 5.3 minutes at 60F degrees
yes bullet proof !!!There is plenty of room with this emulsion to overexpose. That would be the easiest way. By the look of that neg you might be trying to print what isn't there.. All the developing shenanigans in the world won't fix that. Make a BIG PHAT THICK neg first. The kind that prints like you are making toast. Then you'll know what you are dealing with as far as development
This entire thread should really be renamed so that people stop talking about how to reduce contrast. RattyMouse's negatives appear (if the scans are accurate) to have been underexposed.
This is risking a diversion of the thread perhaps but i have just had another look at Rattymouse's picture and my impression remains as it was at the start which is that it looks as if it is the highlights that are slightly blown out. Given the kind of scene that it is, the shadows don't appear to be other than I'd expect them to be, given the nature of the light.RattyMouse's negatives appear (if the scans are accurate) to have been underexposed. I suspect the exposure meter was fooled by the overall brightness of the scene which led to underexposure.
Make a BIG PHAT THICK neg first. The kind that prints like you are making toast. Then you'll know what you are dealing with as far as development.
Yea, even with more dilution HC110 is contrasty with TriX. IMHO HC110 is perfect for low speed films, so for example APX 25 dilution 1:41, 10 min, 20C gives me perfect results. I could never tame TriX with Hc110. I moved to D23. If HC110 is a must do the following: Increase dilution (1:41 was my standard), 20C temp, shorten development time. I know this sounds crazy but decreasing agitation tended to increase contrast in my measurements with this combo.
Oh boy another diversion... but lost in space..
My interpretation, is overexpose a negative, so that it will be very dense, ...when developed.
Is this a correct correct understanding?
If so,.. how would this help with knowing what your dealing with in development?
Or... is this just some sort of, .. ah .. . joke?
Not looking at a datasheet, using the Kodak computing dial that is in the Kodak Darkroom Dataguide. No typo.Kodak's published information only goes down to 65 F where the time for dilution B is 4.5 minutes. There's no way the time is 5.3 minutes at 60 F. You must have a typo.
Ah .. got it. Thank you!No joke, and yes a thick neg. We used to call them 'bullet proof".
Oh, and some idiot wrote this article a long time ago. Might be helpful. Not sure though, the author is barely smarter than a monkey.Ah .. got it. Thank you!
We seem to have the tendency to always unexposed, and like Hc110, but when we first started shooting Arista 400 could not get the contrast down, and finally gave up and went to D-76 with that film, shot at 200.
But loved the tone better in Hc110!
So gonna go back and give it another try, with the thoughts given here in this thread, and see if we can do the do.
thanks all, especially the op who started it. .![]()
...Make a BIG PHAT THICK neg first..
This development time is likely for a previous version of Tri-X, the dataguide is quite old, isn't it?Not looking at a datasheet, using the Kodak computing dial that is in the Kodak Darkroom Dataguide. No typo.
This development time is likely for a previous version of Tri-X, the dataguide is quite old, isn't it?
Just out of curiosity, if Rattymouse continues to use HC110 is there any way he can achieve what he needs to and still keep development time to say 7+ mins. I'd be a bit nervous going as low as 5 mins and yet with HC110 this seems to be the only solution. Maybe 5 mins is OK but I must admit to being used to a more relaxed time period. Things do happen very fast at 5 mins and any leeway is very short, I'd have thought
pentaxuser
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